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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-01 - Orange Coast PilotC&taltna outing turned Into nightmare • as wind, waves wrecked boats In cove 11 JONATHAN VOl.ZKE .............. · An annual Memorial Day weekend jaunt to Catalin..a bland turned into ··a horrible nitbtmare" for a '6-ycar- old Newport Beach woman and five other Oranse Coast residents ~hen thunderin& waves kft their bolts in Shannon Dolan and her Fountain Valley High teammates went down to a 1-0 defeat to St. Paul Tuesday In the CIF 4-A playoffs. /81 lndez AdYlee and Games Bulletin Soard Business Classlfied A7 A3 C7-8 85-7 Comics ~ AS '•ii/" 84 Death notices Entertainment Food ' Mlnd&Body Opinion Police log Public Notices Sports Weather A6 C1-6 A5 88 A3 84, 7 81-4 A2 splinters on the island's rocky coastline . Barbara Dahl' was one of four peo{>k who left Newport Beadl's Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub early Friday on the 36-foot sailboat .. Manposa;• 1to~ with five women on the 30-foot "CnckeL'' .The trip is an annual event for --oach p,irade a-buggy bonanza- Crowds cringe as winners 'crowned' in Irvine contest By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. ....,......... ,.. Cameras Rashed and women crinaed as a two-inch aiant Madapscar hissing cockroach cral>.tled along the back of Jim Bowyer's hand. A simitar rcaction grttted Michael Bohdan'sd«is1on to munch on a chocolate-cove~· cockroach. . .. Hey. I love cockroaches." said Bohdan. a professional exterminator. "They make my mongqe pay- ments." Bohdan isn"t the only one makina • money off the loathsome household Pests. Wcs1em Exterminators of Irvine awarded two SSOO Pfl.ZCS Tuesday to the captors of tbe llrtest Amencal\.. and Oriental cockl"Q9Cbes found in California. Of lhe more than 300 cockroaches entered in the ··oreat American Roach Off' contest at the Irvine firm over the past cipt weeks, the largest American roach was a reddish-brown spcdmcn ca~tured by a Palm Spnnas woman which measured an im- prcss(Ye l. 7l inches. A pair of elementary school youngsters from Oxnard baaed the l~raest Oriental cockroach. which measured 1.18 inches. The American cock.roach winner will be sent to a final competition in some members of the Bahia Corin-they tied to our boat when we tried to t~ian. but this year's journey endc!d mo~e to a safer port." hke no other. . 8ut· the Cracker's anchor line ~ Althoup they checked the weather came entan&Jed in the Mariposa'• before lcavinJ port. the Mariposa proP, and the waves bepn to slam the crew -captained by Dahl's brother, boats lottthcr with thunderina blows Dwayne F$uerhelm ofl.osA•la-outside of Goat Harbor. Pahl said. ~s cauJht in an Uf'.1seatOria.lly str.ona "Our anchor broke loose with the windstorm .that wh1pPed the seas 1n!O Jiant swells and pushed us' onto the a fevered Pitch. • rocks. Then their boat~ to brea~ •·Our problem ·Started with the up bur stem," Dahl Slid. "I've ncvtr Cricket." Dahl said from her Bayside seen anything 'like it. Drive home Tuesday ... Those pls .... was horrible •.. the sound oflbe didn•t have forward or revcnt, so biaboat brqkina upon the rocband Jlm Bowyer of tbe We8tena ~tor Co. and m •ICOt Itel Cbecklq examine eome • Philadelphia in July where it will compete aaainst the nation's bigcst cockroaches for S 1,000 in prize money. The ~nner will be enshrined at the Philadelphia Zoo. "We feel we have u large cockroaches here as anywhere. and we've set out to prove It ... said Bowyer. Western 's sales $UV1ce man- ager. before helping Judae the largest of the 50 entries turned in from throuatiout the extcrm1natin1 com- pan)' 's California and Arizona d1vi~1ons. Armed with measunng dev1cn. 1ncludinl Bohdan·s .. d1g1tal calibrator. the Judges examined the dead insect carcasses for the longest bodies. Sometimes.. it was hard to tell the difference among the top fin· ishers. prompt1nf rad10 DJ Bob Bennett to quip:" fs a dead heat" 21 CENTS lhe siPt of lO-foot waves crash•"I over our sc.rm. •• Dahl said the lfOUP jumped into the Maripo11'1 dinpy, but the propeller of that boll alto f'ouaed in anchor r<>pes tra1li"C in the wa1tr. Felierhthn and another man. whom Dahl did not know mcucd the wometl and puUed them "onto the sands of a unall co Ye just after 9 a. ni. Sunday. Dahl said. -- Remarkably, no one in the poup was ~riously hurt. . .. It wu a miracle we didn't tet rcallY. hun.·· DabJ Jaict .. It Wll a horrible niahtmare." But the niahtmare dida•t end ftr reachina land. she said. The cove Wll small and of'kred little ptOteC'tioo from the poundia& waves and bowt· if\) winds . ••four Sea Scouu from lonl Beach saved us." Dahl saad. ••we used re>pe lifelip~ al\d all soru ofk.nou to wait O\'cr the rocb to another c:ove. We had to stick oor fintim in lit&Je cracks to bans on. ... (Pleue-U&Oa/d) .Irvine's freeway fighters foiled State court rules against initiative on deve oper ees Fnm.$U ... ~ ..... The .. SupraneCouit .... ruled apinst a pt>up of Irvine n:sideou 1CCkina to block the use of developer fees for freeways throuah I beflot initiative. The Committee of Seven Thousand (COST) twice coUec1ed the ~uired sip.turn to force the mo. way recs Quntion onto the ballot. At is.sue is the collection of de-- vdopet' funds for the San J09quio Hills. Footh.111 and Eastern freeways, all of which would run throup or near Irvine. . COST's ~1tions were cballeneed by a coalition of developers and busiMSS IJ'OUPI that favor~ free.. Wl.)-S.: The impet;t 'of Tuesday's 6-1 Su- preme Court dc:ciiion may already have been reduced became tbe cur- rent 'Ciry Council ~ty may _ pennit an advisory vote on tJ3c Western Exterminaton had or-freeway plans. dercd that all entries be dead. but But the ca:sc scu a s.tatewidc intact. Buss that were squished.·: precedent to forbid local bl.1101 squashed or smashed were d i5-meuurn on cenaan te11onal issues. qualifi~ The contest was sponsored .. The constr'UCt1on of{OldSlOCited partl> 1n fun. but also to call attention outside a aty•s boundaries cannot be to the nttd to control the spread of a · strictly municipal alWr,.. said this hardy household pest. , J~~ .. ~ ~ufman in tht .. We want to make the pubhc aware rMjOtlty opsn1on. of the hfcstylt' •nd the vanet1cs of He satd the state oould limit local (Pl--... COCDOACB/ A2) dccision--makina authority to, city Slow-growth initi.ativ.e backe·rs cry foul councils and county supervisors in rcsio~I issues rather than balJOt IDllllll\iel. Dtsscnt1"'-Justice Stanley MOiie said the ~nty j ustices had viol- ated "their duty to &UArd the initiative pov.er." COST attoracy Fred W oocber said thc ruhna "leaves the local people defenseless" qainst wcU-fundod • ~elopment inlefeSU that &<> to s.cra- mento to lt) to thwart k>c:al powtb- con1rol 1n1ua1i"cs. By BOB VAN EVON Ol .. f!illr ......... Backers ofa slow-growth initiative set for a countywK:le vote on Tuctday said they art struUJina to counteract a S 1.6 million campaign of .. lies and · deception" leveled apinst the in- itiative by developers. Trial starts in lawsuit over noise froinarena At issue is a well-financed tele· phone and mail campaian in which initiative opponents claim the measure would wonen traffic and cost more than SI billion to imple- ment. .. I've been 10 Ora_n1_e County politics since the early I %Os. and I've never been subjected to such a barraac of deception and lies,": said Tom Rosers.co-authorofMcasureA. which would tic all new development to mandatory traffic improvements. Rogers and others said at a press conference Tuesday that the de- velopers' campaign makes a number of untrue claims about the crowth· control init1at1ve But John Gregor). a spokesman for lhc deYeloper-backed anti-in1t1attve voup, Citizens· for Traffic Solutions. said his group's campaign 1s not deceitful. and that the larae amount of money collc-ctcd n-pn>scnts "broad Couple.fl-opes UC/ chair will further the cause of peace --, ·BJ IWIDT llYNDMAN seize the initiative and educate for global peace °'~...,,..... , bccauscfaftcr alt. we are what we do." Tierney say~ '' "We want to ·spread the awareness that there att Lite most people, Eliubeth Tierney re-ways to tive peacefully." members leamina history thro ~ biatory of Tiemey says cumplcs abound bow to settle ·wars. differences ~fully and MIOliatc without the Whether Pclopc)nnesian or T~.revolution. threat ofv~. .. • ary or civil, waruerved as the marten for historians .. Every day of our Iha we resolve ci:>ftfllCU.1, aocbartthetwistsalidtumsinworldcvents. h's tittle sheuys. "If Newport Beaclt and CO$ta Mesa have a wonder then that mott students have a better connict, they don't send their police dcf)!rtmcnts undei'suDdina of the c.utes of war than the over to b9ule it out. Wo do resolve differences. main~ of peace. • consaantly. . Eliubeth 'and htr husband Tom Tierney ••tt'uspeaally impotUat now. There's ,encra.I believe tbit some of that thinltins can tie Cha~ ~t that we can't aff'ord another war. with the tbroulb. tbc ntablishment o( a Diversity ~r ~bili~ duit it will escalate into nuclear ..-ar and specifically endowed for IM P"f1M* of peace • nil tie ii over:" ~-ID c:omina months, a scfecdoa QOmmittce Ei• t nh and Tom TtetnCY. who is prUident of •~isCxpec&eclto~theflnelill.-.•fwldof ·~ T...........,d Vitat«h 1n~tion&t lnc.. c:o~· . aadidua ••tcrtsaed 1n the JM*. r tnbuled $250.000 toward a.tabhshm°'t of the c.hair. .. My huiband and l raQy WI il'a ~t to IPI 111 .. COOPLS/ A2J baSt'd suppon •· "It's not hes bad..cd by b•i mon~~ " he said. "h 's truth becked by a lot of support. Undoubtedly there 1s a lot of money from the bu1ldi"1 communi- ty. But that doesn't affect the broadl) based &roup of voluntccn and bus1· (Pleue .. TRAJTIC/ A2) \\ oochcr prcdic1ed Irvine oftkials, under pressure from local vo1er1. CPleue .. mvms/ A2J HB urging delay of Bolsa c ·h ica bill IJ BOBUT BAll&D ... ...., ...... Huntinston 8aC'h cit)' Qffici,als uflCd ScQ. Manan 8ctlaOrl to delay her qislatioft OQ lolil QJc:a ODC m0tt time :fuaclly chirina a boisatrous mcellftl i~ wbida spcct1e .. ton hooted and ~ IOd Mayor )Qian Enktac ...-red to to into • SAit pulled later-into an interim heann& status until "all problems •~ rc- soh ed." Bu(~ ~ today that ~ cau~ the bill is in its eecond ~and v.1th th~ Lcaislature ·~l'.'I the cod of its sesston. it wouldn't fit into the catcaor> of an interim bolriftl. I nstcad. 1t .. an the city wilt hiokS a public hca.rin& June 9 OCl the controYersial bUI and pla.a. wbidl came un«r heavy fltt duri._ a public hcarina last F~. · A hWina btm the AMetnbly Naiuial RetOWCa Commitllec it schcd'61cd «> ft>llow J unc 20. ~ llmpll divided Cit~ounril su~abid~C:O.nci Tom Man ao ,_.. Beta1111G •,.. tt.c controwrsill WI -approved last ••••llil•••lil••••••••••••••••lll••~ ~tt:f lt.t aatt ~~to bt 8c1 '*" c:ntic:bid for caMiauina. to push tlllt i!BI II~ lft the tR of heavy local c-.•oppolibOai'onl cnvirotnaMI ... •• powdl .. t1ons.. llicl *ii COMiw to -- with an Sides-•~ Lando.... CPl••·-••'1.ua t .. .. . . .. \ Elisabeth Tlerneypoea by a P!rtrattla ber-ta ADaBeJChtahome. COUPLE HOPES TO FURTHER PEACE ••• Prom Al which wiU take its ptaee at UCI amona other endowed chairs devoted mostly to science and medicine. • The ~lcction ofa scholar to fill the ·Thomas and Ehzabeth Tierney Chair "in Peace Research would culminate an effort bttun more than two ~rs !llO when the couple proposed the idea. - The Santa Ana Hei&hts ~Jdcnts have a longtime interest in peace research and arc members of Beyond War, a group that believes war is obsolete and no longer can function in contemporary times. They learned that UCI has a program m 61obal Peace llnd Con- flicts Studies which. althou&h not a formal ma~, offers classes that arc popular amona students. With the helpofprofcssorsJuhus Margolis and John Whitely, the T1crneys proposed a research chair in peace studies, the first such chair in the University of CaJifomta's nine-ampus system. The UC Board of Resents con- sidered the proposal and approved it after discussfog the plan with the Ticrncys to dctcrmme what their intentions were for endowing the chair. The ,.nts alto were curious why the Tiemeys chose UCJ in the heart of con~rvative Oran,sc County when their dau&htcr attended UCLA and there was a better-developed peace research proaram already at UC San Di . !tfy husband and I just looked at each other and said. 'Well. we live here.' It never occurred to us to do 11 anywhere cite," Tierney says. · Althoup the university has its own selection comm ittee, the Tiemcys have kept apprised of the prosress and have heard various candidates speak during visits to UCJ. "It's very P'=. stuff; I was extremely .im ;• Tierney says. ·'These people arc incredibly knowl- cdpble and that's cuctly what we want. And they're very dist1npishcd. full of information and study and representing a very diverse back- ground.'' The endowed chair. h~etcd by university scholars, has attractCd internationally known experts in economics. political science, physics, ccoloSY and other disciplines. Despite thedivenemakeupofthccanmdates. Tierney says they all have performed work and research that has con~ tributed to the study of g)obel peace. .. It's also important to us that this distingllished professor not remain in an ivory tower but be very willina to 10 out inlq the OranlC Countr, community and verbalize the woik. • Tierney said. .. He or she shouJd be able to speak lO people. to articulate the concerns. wc~wanted a visible person to fill this cl)Jir." Altbou,h the ~pecific role of the scholar will be determined by the umvcB1ty, Tierney 1s confident the position will bOOst the awareness in peace meareh ind prompt f unher inquiry among students and mem- bers of the community. '"We wanted to take these studies out of the realm of J><>litics and really understand that its in everybody's best interests," she says. .. It's in the best interests of the economy and cerUinly our health. · "Actually there arc no alternatavcs today. We either hve together or destroy each other. That's the ul- timate message. so we'd better stan learning how to do u now." SAILOR RECOUNTS STORM ORDEAL ••• From Al The scouts led the group to Goat Harbor. which as rinaed by 1.000-foot cliffs and rnaccessJble by road. Jn the harbor. the ill-fated boaters met up with some campers who were also . held hostage by the storm. "The campers gave us food.'' Dahl said "And we spent Sunday night in tbc1r tents. slccpin& on the ground. We were 1n wet clothes and didn't have any blankets. but we all made it. "Mostly, we huddled together and tried to keep warm. One of the camper's boats. a 25-foot slc.1pjack.. broke loose and we watched the waves break over its bow. They swamped it and •t sank, too." Finally, a Los Angeles County Shcnfrs Department helicopter ap- peared Monday -30 hours after the ordeal began -and lifted the boaten and campers to an 1dland area where they could be dnven to Avalon. the island's only town. Among those rescued was a J..~ar-old child. Authorities said the waves took the hves of two Los Angeles men and left hundreds of boaters in need of help. Other Orange Coast residents who endured the week.end with Dahl were Engel Hanop. A!llela Bowie aod Leslie Ree. all of Newport Beach: Cyn1hia Louder of Costa Mesa and Paul K1tlas ofDana Point. authontics said . Some of the Goat Hal'bor survivors came home on the ferry Monday, while others returned Tuesday. Dahl said. But before separating. she said each signed their names on a paper plate. "We're going to have a shirwrcck pany at my house.'' Dah $11d. "Evcryo~ofthcm as going to come. I owe them so mach." ~ BOLSA CilICA BILL DELAY ASKED .•. From Al the county and the city. She claimed that dealing with the city has bttn .. hlc.e talking to one of the tentacles of an octopus to find out what it's been dorna ... Bcraeson said she's added amend- ments to the bill at the request of city leaders. only to have local officials find fault with them later. Tuesday night's vote . -which came on a stra1gh1 party hne vote of growth advocates vs. envaronmen- tahsts -appeared to be a sharp ' retreat on the tough recommen- dations made earlier by City Admin- istrator Paul Cook. Winchell said she IS baffled by Bcrgcson's request for the city to postpone a June 2 pubhc hearina in favor of a June 9 public hearing. "I think It 1s lied up to the election (June 7) some way, but I can't figure out why.'' she said. Erskine. v1s1bly penurbcd by the cheering and hooting of the large crowd, threatened to walk out at one po ant. He asked Jack Kelly. as a former ma)'or. what he'd do -if he wouJd walk out. Kelly responded. with a laugh· "suffer." Highway and other projects. A development plan approved by county supervisors and tentatively approved by the State Coastal Com- mission allows Si1nal to build. 700 homes, a 1,600-slip marina and possibly a navipble channel in the area adjacent to Pacific Coast High- way and south ofWarntr Avenue. The plan also calls for Signal to resore 91 5 acres of wetlands as a wildlife preserve. Water rationing begins OAKLAND (AP) -Mandatory water rationing staned throuahout Nell\ .... lt2 ., Calif. Temps~ ·Extended ... OtlelN • a U.S. Tempe. .... VoRClly \ 11 70 Nlgllt _. _.,.,. IOW _. ,,_ • _ .. ... '* .. :, io.,., 14 ...... ..-.e .. s • Ill ........ ~ rr, Oll~Cll)' ., OnWla ... 11 ltw°'41' ~ ~ ... ::'C Mcllloraoa ... ~ • 17 .......... .. '° r9nQ1no from ~ IOt ,,_, "'._. " 17 • PNllldefPhl9 ta 15 fltfellt 51 14 ...,_,olllt Ollnlend l-tl =..::.~·)' 13 .. '91C*'ti• • 17 ,,_ a M IN IOW SOI to low IOf 11 • • 11 a .. "*"'*" .. 17 =err. . ......... tO lo.~ IO o... .... 1r to 9oelon 13 .. l"Of1lllnd Ore 11 .. "-~ .. 47 Surf Report .,.,..., to : =rOll)' N .. ....,..,.. n ., ~on.9C tO 71 4t ~ 74 .. c:Nno11aMC .. " IWlo 11 61 ~Cll) 10 81 ICZI IMAn Chicago t2 '° S1 leult 12 .. .__,o t2 IO LOCAnoet ~II ,, H Sall ltll• City IJ IO ....... • a ~OlllMM:ll t.J -~ .. U ... M!Oftlo .. n 11111~ 72 6a "'-Jmtty.~ t.J .. ~ONo u tO a. .. • IO .. ...,.,,.,_ .. a ...... --. """*1 2.J -o.a..Ft Wonfl ., ... ~ '° 47 SM,,_ 14 !It ~·---~ 2.J ,_ Oa;!Ofl t2 It " Stoc.lllOll 7t • ~--.. 2.J .... .. ,_,_ o.n-• 41 T~tPI~ to .. Hogh. low '°' 2• !lour•~ .. :: "' l.llOU'lt ...... 1·2 "= '*~ • • T~ Ian tow 41 l.tfla.-ta t-3 17 II o.ltoot • • T_, .. 15 S.-1 It 40 Wlltw ""'P· A ll' • .. " ._.. dlreCtlon w.i =· t0 Tulu .. 8118-n 47 W~IOflOC 12 .. Mlhop n .. .. 11. " WldllU M 11 ...,_ .. 11 ,..,..,,... U IO . C.lllM " ao ......... . ., JO L_ ... tO 11 Tides Grnl~ IO 11 LonglMdl n 14 '4onolW 13 74 Smog Report LA Alrpot1 71 13 HoYltOft 81 11 Newport IMcll 83 53 TOOAY :u ~dlal-.illlll u 11 OntWIO ., .. hcondlow 3"4plll ,,._, .. .. .. l'allll•t .. _._ .... U-t 0-so ....... Spr .. .., 17 .._,., ,. 10 '2 p Ill ., Jld!w ... " 51 "'--da 13 0 MIMOAY =..e.1·100 "'°°90 .... 101-1• -~ II u . ~2tt _., .......... llA. 300 591'..,nwd-• 4t '1rlll low S St am 1 2 ~City •a a..O.bttel " ao ::'o::'iow 12 41 p"' 31 t::z: .. to end .iio... l'lalt<dout ""'' •• .. ..,.-.. dlly0I Mllllnecl pel a.ocw.. It-Swli.AN 11 12 04P-fll.. 21 -" 13 Sanlt9wbtt• .. 44 ll4lcond high 105tpm 12 LOUWOltle 11 .. ~··pill lorec:ast 8Ml•CNz • 41 ....... 12 .. Senl ........ .. 40 liM!MCUtf 57p:;..-TllWtd9y .. MIMll8-ll IO 71 IMta Monie. .. 57 541am INI.... M75tp111 .......... to ... TetweV~ ... 31 Moon ...... tll 53p111 -~ Mpll.$1 ...... 11 .. T«r8"09 11 11 ... ,.. ___ ....,..Wl ... pM. TRAFFIC MEASURE BACKERS CRY FOUL ••• l"romA2 ncss people who arc out there worlc.ina with us to defeat lhis measure ... One claim leveled by Citizens' for Traffic Solutions is that public im- provements mandated under Measure A would cost up to S 1.4 billion. and that most of that burden would be borne by cities, for the benefit of the county's unin- corporated areas. "This is patently false ... said Larry Agran, ma)Or of Irvine and a S\IP- poner of the 1n1tiauvc ... There is no mc.t:hanism for the county to saddJe the cities with al}y of these costs." Norm Gro~man. a pro;.initiatavc activist from Laguna Beach, said a county rcpon often cited by initiative opponents does not say what the opponents claim it docs. "They say it would cost the county S 1.4 billion to brina everything up to the standards 1mposed by the in- FORUM ••• From Al Founcen aind1dates entered the GOP primary in the 40th where the Republican nominee is Jenerally accep1ed to be the eventu winner because of the pany's overwhelm mg registration advantage. Wath the announcements by Latham and Swan. the field has been reduced to I 0. itiativc. but the repon very clearly says that the init1ahve does not require the whole county~ to be brought up to eXJstang traffic stan- dards ... said Grossman. "It takes an out-and-out he to interpret this repon the way the opposition interprets at." reponcd more than S 1.53 m1lhon in contrabulions and loans. about two- thirds of which was received from 35 county developers ahd real estate companies. The largest contnbutors were The Irvine Co. and the Mission VaeJO Co .• each of which contributed $100.000 to the anti-initiative campaign. Agran said he had received htera- ture claiming that Measure A would benefit "south county landowners" a1 the expense of other county residents. "This mailer was funded by a who's The pro-init1et1vc group, Ciuzens' who among south county land-for ~nsible Growth and Traffic owners.'' he said. "for them to Control. reponed JUSt under $48,000 suggest that we arc doing the work of in its campaiJn statement. The two south count) developers 1s an largest donations were $5.000 and absurdi1y.'· Sl.000. received from a Laguna In its campaign financial state-~°'Beach resident and a Newport Beach mcnt. Citizens· for Traffic Solutions environmental group. respectively. Actress Florida Frie bus dies . . Florida Fnebus. who played the utle character's mother on the I 9SOs series "The Many Loves of Dobie Gailis" and a group therapy ~ticnt on "The Bob Newhart Show.' has died at her Laguna Niguel home. She was 79. Fricbus was a veteran of numerous stage productions op the East Coast beforecomang to LosAnaelesin 1955. But she is perhaps best known for her ponrayal of the dimwitted. sweater· knittina Mrs. Bakerman as a regular on "The Bob Newhart Show" dunng its run from 1972 to 1978. Bom in 1908 on Nantucket Island. Mass .• Friebus daed Friday in Laguna Niguel. No cause of death was civen. Fricbus left no family survivors. and an accordance with her wishes there will be no memorial services. She asked that any commemorative donations be made to The Actors' Fund of Amenca 1n New York. TRIAL OPENS ON AMPHITHEATER NOISE ••• From Al completed. Beacom gave Papiano two weeks to show the papers were filed. He also said hrs clients -which he called "ordinar} housewives" - "plumb didn't know the law·· If Beacom rules m favor of the citizens. he could then rule on the complaints about environmental rc- pon. Spix said. If the judge agrees wath Spix's arguments that the environmental studies were improper. the lease between the state and Ned West could be ruled anvahd. Sp1x said Should Beacom rule against the c1rizens. the trial would then focus on whether the amphitheater constitutes an unreasonable nuisance to nearby midents. Spix said he would rely on a county sound expen who monitored con- ccns last season under a judge's order and the residents' testimony to prove the arena is a nuisance. His goal as a court order to Ned West officials to turn down the music and reimburse the residents for court fees. ··The environmental stuffis kind of digang at their roots. and the nuisance stuff is trimmina their branches." Spix saad. · The trial. expected to last sax weck'- will conclude with a hearing to determine whether Ned West of- ficials and amphitheater manager Steve Redfearn violated a coun order when concens last ~ason allcacdly were louder than 70 decibels -equal to normal converSJtion -at the outer ed&c of the arc!\ a. If found guilty of the more than 200 contempt allqations. the officials could be Jailed or fined. Cook, citing an alleged lack of guarantees for wetlands and beach protection. uflcd local officials to ask Bcricson to withdraw the ball Erksrne then said he would take Kelly's advice. ''The louder they talk. the less I hear.'' he said of the noisy crowd. Bergcson's bill would establish an assessment distnct to provide up to $230 million to finance possible construction of a navipble channel. a new bridge. rerouting of Pacific Coast the~~~) Munaca~I Utility 01~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ trict today with a aoal of reducing fi'<>unc11woman Grace Winchell, who voted with Pete r Green and Ruth Pinley to follow Cook's recommen- dations., said she 1s conccmed the state Assembly will act on the controversial measure without hear- ing local concern~ I .. ------------- ··IRVINE •.. l"romAl would move to have the freeway projects scaled down Two J01nt-power agencies rep- ; rcsent1na the county and cities that •would bt served by the freeways arc holdina the fttS collected by mem- bers. l Tbe Foothill·Eastern )Oint powers ~Y bas held Irvine s funds. in a special account pcndina resolution of • me COST leall dispute. MAIN OfflCE I col}sumption b y 25 percent. The plan is designed to cut excess use by increasing rates as consump- tion goes up. COCKROACH CONTEST ••• Prom Al cockroaches. You know there arc 4.000 different species.'' Bowyer said. ··And we want to declare war on all of them .. Bowyer recommended that besides hmng a professional cllterminator. the best way to rid a home of tockroachcs is to seal cracks and crevices lo keep them from entenna the home. and to control the amount of moisture that accumulates in the house and attracts the bup Bowyer is fimiliar eno"ltl with cockroaches t.o allow 1 lM-h• Madapscar roach to crawl across hts body and BohJian showed no squeamishness, even as he crunched a chocolaic<o..,ered roach in half. But the other emplbyccs and the ,.porters who attended Tuesday"s press conference were less inclined toward such bravery. When Bowyer invited the aa. sembled lo enJOY the buffet say1na. .. We have• some appetizers. help )'~If... the line was slow in fonn1ns. .. 5 .. 330...,. .., St Cost• ...,.... c~ Mat 6ddr-Boo 1see>. C.0-t #-CA l2t2$ ~""" '41 71 11o, ....... l .olO ..... , • .,,, JaatcaU 642~6086 A Present For Your Wonderfl:al Dad? A Gift For Your Favorite Grad? ALL DRESS SHIRTs AND ALL TIES /5-toOFF NOw tlvu /~ 11th We 'II 11/hrt If) tool Seminar to out mortgage costs planiieeff or OCC A thaw-hour worbhopo«erina tiP' on how IO pey oft' Your mo"'* in ball the time will be conducted Tuetday Trom 7 to 10 p.m. iD Room 105 of the CowUelina and Admia&iont 8uilc:tint at · Oranllt Coat Col• in Cosca Mesa. Ted aad Eileen Burkan, real estate broken ror over. lS years. will conduct the seminar. The reaimation fee is SlS. -• Panicipentl will leara a method of' pre-peYf'!'tnt that will NVe tt\OUl&ndJ O( dollars in JDtcresl eteh year. Call 432·S880 ror additional information. Picnic for re.tarded .et .. It's a Small World" is this year's theme for the 1eventh annual picnic for the developmentaJly disabled. to be held Sunday at NorthwOod Com· mun!!y Pirie in Irvine. The City's Soroptimist Oulwnd the City of Irvine are sl)Onsorina the event. «.ch will run from 10 Lm. to 2 r.m. and is free to registered participants. Cal Marsha Buraess at 66().3983 or Robin Huffman at 863-9434 for details. . SUentaacdonatUbrary The Friends of the ~na Beach Library Aft boldil'\I a silent auction of boob.from now throuah June IS durina rqular hours at the Friends' bookshop. The bookshop as located adjacent to the library park.ina lot at 363 Glenneyre St. Hours are Tuesday tbrou&h Saturday from t t a.m . to 3 p.m., with more infonnat1on available at 497·7 I IS. . Meetlng semlnar slated ··Mastcnng Your Meetings .. 1~ the utle of a seminar to be offered Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon in RQ011t 408 of the Volunteer Center. I 440 E. First St., SalCta Ana. T <>pies wiJl include ways to m.ake mcetmp more effective and producti..,...nd overcoming problems and obstacles. The cost is $20, and reservations and infonnation may be obtained by callina 9SJ.57S7. Redevelopment talk set A presentation by Triaft&le SQua.rc AssoctateS rcprding a project proposed for downtown Costa Meu will be11ven Tuesday at 7 p.m.1n the first floor conference room of City HaJI, 77 Fair Drive. The event is not a formal public hearing. but an opportunit:y to acquaint the public with the project. Call Millie Summerhn at 754-5167 for further information. Stop smok1ng classes Fresh Start. a program for smokers wishing to quit. will be offered, bqinning Tuesday. at South Coast Community Hospital, 31872 South Coast Highway in South Laauna. The classes wi11 be held Tuesdays and Thundays from 7 to 8:30 p.m .• and participation is limited. Call the Education Department of the American Cancer Society at 1S 1-0441 to register. Investment semlnar A Cree seminar entitled "OpportunittCl in Fixed·lncome lnvestjng" will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Balboa Bay Oub in Newport Beach. John Stroh, vice president of the Newport Beach office of Kidder, Peabody and Co., will conduct the prosram. Ca.II 85 I· 7 I 36 for add1t1onal information aod reservations. IrvlJJe Opt1m1sts meet Peter Pyle, JOvemor of the PlcJfic Southeast Distnct of Opt1m1st lntemahooaJ, will address Tuesday's mcctma oflhe Optjrillst Oub oflrvine on "Youth Programs That Work." The event 1s scheduled for 7 a.m. at Hofs Hut, 188SO Dousjas St., Irvine. Ca.It 8JO.S639 or S38·5882 for more infonnation. Wednesday, Jane 1 • 7 p.m. Lapu Beaa ()pea Space Com· mlHloD, council chambers, SOS Forest Ave. • 7 p.m. Lapu Baell Plull1D1 Comml11loa, community development conference room, SOS Forest Ave. Thursday, June 2 • 6: 30 p.m ., Lapu Bead Board of A4Ju&· meat UHi Destp Review Board, council chambers, SOS Forest Ave. Orenge Coat OAJLY '9LOTIW9G 11dey • .U. ,, -* - BJ LA:NCS IGNON Codt requires 1'00 lada'1 to ddiv~ ... ..,,...... pctllions to City Cktk Verna ltollilfCt. • hhoup &ht let~r inUes M mm hon al fearina Liaun& ~h city O~I will Rolltnltf', Ban,.ra We1tbrook 11.id lht ~!t lhOtC who s1an a Cit)' C~ tee:all dot$ not trust Rotlinacr to tttp tht nama petation, recall ltadel"I are •P;ina t!'le on &he petition seem. Wntbrook' 11.id Oran.~ County Ora~ Ju~ to ~1squahfy Rollinatr miaht leak tht names to ~ lbe.c!t)' ftom overstt1n1 xen(~uono(1M ~ho would l~ to penuade tbe>tt who peuuons. s.aptd the pctilJOD to remove l.beir names. e.rbera and Pa~I Westbtoolc: sent a two-Tht' recall -which bas been t.ckcd by pqc letter. to JUJ')'. f0tt!"l.l.n James the Chamber of Commerce and a con-. Lindbc'1 fnday allcaif.'l~nns:ownen • scrvativcsovemmeot watchdouroup, the •"4 . ttS1dents are af~1d to SJJJ\ ·.the Taxpa~ers Associauon -is aimed at petiuons for fear of ~pnsat from the city. rcmov1n1 Ma)or Dan Kenney and council T!'e lener asks that 1M 9'anae County members Robn1 Gentry and Lida Lenney. Ref!~tllr of _Yotet1 ttec1ve the ~I RoUinrtr satd that by law sbe wouk1 not petitions.. As It stands. the state Election be allowtd to divul~ any of the nama on A gooey experience tht pttaliOM. While the WC\tbrooks actute Rollin~ of malfeasanct. a con~hant for w Committee to R«all City Council said t~ city dcrk has treated him fairly. .. Maybe that's my naive interpretation."' Re• Brach said. "Sht's done htt job. he ba$ \old me from the 'lief)' ouixt that lhc's aoina to tum this over to the' Rqi$\rar of Voters." Accordina to the state Elcction Code, a city clerk must fint tteeive the rccaJI pc11tion1 for verifation. Because the city of Lquna Beach has limited staff, it plans lO hirt t~ llqjstrarofVokrs to verif)· the 1ignatures atkr Rollinger makn an m1ttaJ e•amination. camte Tamietti rldt~ 4, jotna Paulene "'•I••· 4 . and Broob llanJey, S, for .ome p ot-.o-clean fail in tJae mad at tbe Tew Bome Day Care Center lQ. Ca.tall--. . . lrvine lawsuit spn:rs attempt to alter product liability law States News Service WASHINGTON -Australian Elsie Corrigan died in September I 982 at the age of 49. Just a few days after she was fined wnh a heart valve made by Shiley Inc. of Irvine. Her husband sued Shiley in the Cah- fomia state courts, claiming the vaJve was defecttve and the company neaJigent. but the firm asked that the case be transferred to Austrahan courts and considered under Australia's lcss--stringent product ltab1hty laws. After the Supreme Coun refused to hear case, Comgan's husband and Shiley"s parent company, Pfizer Inc., subsequently settled out of court for an undisclosed sum To avoid similar legal banles 1n the future. Pfizer 1s now pushing a bill 1n Congress that would move such hab1hty cases from state courts to the federal courts and would require the cases be tried under the laM of a fore1an plaJntiffs country. Pfizer araues the law would enhan~ the Unned States' compcuuveness. The bill received its first hcanng before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee Wednes- day and provoked an emotional debate between its backers and critics over the motives behind the bill One muc. Enc Hard. a laW)er for consumer actJVlst Ralph Nader"s Con· grcsswatch, maintained that the bill was prompted less by concerns about Amen· can competitiveness than by more than 200 la'tl:su1ts apjnst Pfizer and Sh.1ley over the Shiley heart valve The lawsuits. many by foreign plaintiffs. acne.rally allege that Shiley was nqhpt 10 des11nm1 and manufacturing the BJOnt· Shiley 60-dcgrce Convcx<>-Concave mcch· an1caJ heart valve. of wbjch about 8S,OOO wert sold woddWJdc ..bctwccn 1979 and 1986. Most were produa:d 1n Shiky·s Irvine plant. the remafoder 1n its Puerto Rico fac1ht1cs. The lawsuits allqe that bccau~ of shoddy manufacturina some of the valves fractumi aner implantation, resulting an death or inJury According to the U S. Food and Drug Adm1mstrat1on. which issued recalls for the valves and has been highly crittcal of Sh1ley's quality control, I 34 recipients have died Thirty of the suits have been settled out of court, some reported!) for S I m1lhon or more None of the suits has gone to trial. Hard alle&ed Wednt'Sday that Pfizer wants the &ill passed to protect the company from future lawsuits over the heart valves. Pfizer's v. ashmaton at· tomcy. Philip Lacovara. \ 1gorousl) de- nied the charge. In his testimony before the Senate courts and admmistrat1ve pracuccs subcommll· tee. Lacovara araued that 1he bill was needed because . .\merican firms arc penal· 1zed in international compcuuon b\ the United States' product hab1ht) laws Lacovara told subcommittee chairman Howell Heflm, D-Ala.. that ~mencan companies are -exposed to a far mo!"(' swccp11'\1 financial exposure ... than their forcian counterparts" because Amencan product hab1lity laws are the toughest 1n the world. Heflin is sponsonng the bill. an pan. at Pfizer's behest. Whale American firms sued by foretpers are held 10 the touah standards of American habtlity laws at great upcnsr, forctan companies arc -held account.ah'c only under rar Jess scnerous laws" io lbcit home cou.ntncs. Larovan said The bdl. he said. "'ouJd pennu Ameri· can companies dom& business overseas to be held to the same ltab11ity standards as their fot'C1&Jl com pct1 tors. since U .S courts would apply the laws of the countn an which l~ plaintiff hves or ,,.hcTc the allctcd injury took place - Hard argued that Pfizer's interest in the bill has httJe to do with compet1ttvcncss since the company has performed well overseas. Hard cited Pfizer's 1987 annual report. which says the firm's mtemat1onaJ pharmattutical sales arcw -s1an1ficantl)- . las1 vear. "'h1k Amencan sales ··remained flat.(, Hard told Heflm thi1 Pfizer had unsuc· ccssfull) pushed a ball in the Cahfom1a lq:aslaturc that would have permitted the firm to mo"e hab1ht) cases such as the Ont' brou&ht b) Els1eCompn's husband ou1 of the Ca.1'°m1a courts, where. an estirMted SO of the valve lawsuits have been filed b)' forc1aners. .. AJI the eV1dcncc sho.,.,'S that Pfizt'r is far lcssCOO\.--Cmed about compct1t1"enns 1han solvm& 1tslcplJam O\eritsdefective hcan vaht"S .. Passage of the bill, he said. ··.,.,.ould ~nd the worst possible message to manufac- tum-s of dcfccll" e products. that is. Conarcss wiU Pf0\1de a rcfufe for ,.rona- docrs and corporatJons guilt) of gross negl1acncc.- TM WaibroOb 1R ~ .. a..i Jury •1ll ask au~ atpiete:•d .. IM county ao•instNC't the R..,arol'VOWI to 1ntcnc:ne." But to do to lhc Grand Jury would ha'\IC~ to uncover the allta,cd corruption in City Hall v.i1hin the next 30 days bdott it breaks for rec:css &ftd ~n1 a new fdcal )car. :r~. ~ or~~ ~ -mvcst1pt1on 1• ~motc1 Lindbefl aid. ··To come tbi• tatt' lD lbe prM~ w.:'n: just busy as heck;' be 11.id. But even if the Grand fary tunco~red dirty 1ricb in Cit) Hal~that doe$ DOt mean the Rcaistrar of VOlt'tS would be bound to take over the eieclioa proc:ieA. said Dan Tanney. rciisll'lt of ~oien. Recall of Riley, Wieder asS~lled By BOB VAN EYIEN Of ... O..,,... .... >\ group of present and former city offi~ 1als said Tuesday that the constitu· uonall~ mandated recall process is ~mg abused b) a groop ti') inf to oust county supc1"1'°rs Hamett Wieder and Tom Rile). Wieder and Rile) have been served with nott~ b} opponents who say they intend to coltcct signatures m suppon of rccaJI elections. The opponents accuse W1cc:kr and Rile> of supporting the interests of developers against 1he interests of county residents.. The recall nouccs make specific referen- ce to the Irvine Co.'s Laguna Laurel prOJCCt in ~una Canyon which both W1c<kr and Riley supponcd. Bui Ron Shenlman. former mayor.of Hunttn&ton Beach. said Tund.ay that l't'calls a~ meant to be' used to remove poluacians who ha\e broken the law or othe~ isc acted uncth1caIJy. He accused proponents of the Riley and Wieder recalls of betn& pohticall) mouvated. ··tsn"t 11 strancr that Hamett Wieder wa\ s.crved with a rcca.11 noticc in the midst of her campaign for Congress:· be said. Wieder. a resident of Huntinaton Har· bour. as running for the Republican nomana11on in the 4::!nd congrnsional dmnc1. v.h1ch includes pans Qf Oran&f' Count). Shenkman also said Riley's vottng record o"er the past decade has rctt1"ed v.1de suppon in his dLStnct and that be should not be persecuted for his vote on a ~mtlc. con\rO\CrsiaJ development pro.JCC'l He had espcc1all) harsh •ords for statements made by recall advocate Dous Lange' an ~'eral da~s before Wieder was s.cn cd wnh her official notice. Langl:'\1n wd at the time that he was •a1t1n1 a few <bys in order to Jive Wieder a <'hancc to l"CSClnd her vote on the LaJuna Lluf"('I proJect W1t'dtr did not 10 back on her vote and Lange' in SCf"\cd hc"r with the rtall notice Ma' ~3. ··'rh1s 1s a blatant anemp1 at political C\ton1on:· ~1d ~henkman .. ._. ou may as v.cll hand an en,tlopc full of ca~ to someone and sa~ ing "ote for this and you get tt. It"s bnbcr) and extortJon." Hl· ">aid he-\I.JS aslong 1hc Oranar Count' Grand Jun and the D1Stnct .\ttorn·c~ ·\ officc to 1ri,est1gate Langt'\,n·s purported anempt to influence Wteder"s 'Oil' v.11h lhl." recall thf"('at. ~hcn~ma.n \l.3SJOtncd b) sc~eral prt'Sent "'' council members and other elected oflic1als v. ho also s.a1d the' v.~ COOC't'mcd ahout the .. misuse and ab.use"' of the rccall proet"\S ··The rC"C"all process was intended for 'en scnou\ malfeas.ance and m1sfe-asancc an offio. . "><Ud Peter Buffa. a member of tht" Costa \k..a \1t} Council ··1t was not ntc-ndcd tv tie used v.hcn ~ou s1mpl~ d1s.agrtt "1th a public official on some- 1s.,ue That\ v. hat the norm.al electoral proet"ss '' for·· Other' at 1 uc:sJa~ 's press conference 1ndudcd Co~ta \1~ Ma)or Donn Hall and Fountain \'alk~ Mayor~orae Scon. Anti~c~minunists suspected in Vietnamese business fires ingwood said her t'stranged husband threatened to kill her and her son 1f she" left. The man has a h1ston of violence. bul dad not ha'e a gun police said. LapnaBeaeh BantfDCton Beach A man 1'11lh a bt-ard allcgedh used a .:?·mch steel rt' oh·t'r to hold upa man at lM beach Tu~~ evenina. The robber, bel~Hd lO be ID hlS 40s neaped "'1th about S.-00. The inc•· dent occurrt'd :u about 6 p .m. cast of the pier outside-v. hen her dot bapn bark.in&,. loud I) 1n the It" 1n1 room at 4:47 a.m. 1oda'. A. patrol ch«k of the neiah· ~lrhood failed to ~icld any suspects. • • • 5omrone pou1bfy uxd a key to \tt'a .i ' 1dt'ocassct1e rcconkr and a tt'k' 1'-IOn set at a rcsidentt 1n the ti ~oo hlock of 1'kundna Dnvt ••• LOS ANGELES (AP) -Anon cconoihy. teitik compan:r. Flames were doused invest1ptots say they art explOril'\I Los Anaclc:s Fire Department's there after causina only minor dam· Someone cn1emi a home in tht' • • the possibility tbat two shops 1n chief arson anvcst1gator, Capt. Gary qe. ho.,.,.-cver. • A 40-year-old man from Dana Point was held on SI 0.000 bail after bein.aarrcsted for suspieton of drunk· CA.dnvina and an ountandtn& war rant for the same offense ~rlando P. Triscari was taken into cus1od" at 2:21 a.m . Tuesday at BluffDnve.and Pac:aftc Coast HtJhwa) m South Laauna. 22000 block of Wallin&ford Lane- throuah a peuo door and stoic a la~ amount of jewel'). ---...·--·-- Garden Grove and two othcn in Los Seidel, 511d Tuesday investtpton Seidel said both fires were caused Anacles that ship goods to were wcrt cons1dcnn1 whether such polit1· by s1m1lar incendiary dcvlC'CS. torched by anti~ommunist rcfuattS cal motives may have trigen:d the One of the two Garden Grove fires from Vietnam. four attacks. caused an estimated SI 30.000. said All four busjncsscs ta ratted in the The fires all broke out before dawn. fire Capt. Bill Dumas. a Garden attacks Monday wert owned by The most scnous blue did an Grove arson investtptor. Vietnamese immiaran&S and handled estimated $4SO.OOO da.mqc to the It was s~rked by a MttmMlclay the shipments of con.sumer aoods Asian Tower shoppina center in Los device.. hidden inside a pecJcaee ·sent by other immivants to relatives An~ Chinatown. including a tex· submitted to the shop for shipment to livinJ in their nauve country, fire . tile firm that makes shipments to Vietnam. he said. offiClllS said. ....--. ~Vietnam. Sci"" said. A similat ~vice was found in Stridentanti<e>mmunistsoften o~ About Lhe same time, unother fi~ another Garden Grove store. but • • • A rt-stcknt an tht 1700 h'od.: of Ronald Rc.d said ~~ believed a bufllar miaht 'ha'Vc bttn. turttma AutlJoritlesfear teens may ldll police offlcer POlllC such shipm--. "COntmdina broke oul in a shop located a brod 6z:ztcd and burned i hole in its they help tht Communist Viet· 1way ttiat v."&S owned by the same piKk.qiewithouttrigMnaatircatthe ~ ,. namcte 90vcmmcnt improve its Vietnamese f.tmily that <>pttatC'S IM business. he said. BJ Tht kidftaP. victim, 1'1'0Sir name-:;:::;:;:::;!!~~~~~~·~·~:-~~~--~-!'119---;..----..;. .. _~~~~~;;;;;;;;;--•• ... _ 110t avmtabk.--~ the coupk ~ Otanee Coast police a.re OG the intcftdcd to break tbe pttd hmat an taken ._.IS I U25 suit, sitt 40 lookoot for I tml~ C"OQptc their laoleft Ital FOrd lariat pktup _._. ._,. ;-• ~oftk:ctiil tndintbCb(JiJCtbe)·wOUldbcpullcd ----"" -.....-OYU'. lbc)• 1p&iancd to sboot lft} lntae Sout .. Caroliu Ud ttuatmU. to do ~ offiC'cr _..,vied '° iswc them • T...0 chinchdlas wa-e &akc:n from the .me in Califbmia. a aidd. tbr victim id. · tM ki~ f9CMA al \Jai¥«1iky-4 ¥~~WM kidn"'91d lod.-llk:tcdtt'a1"1'1Rd"Wilfi I Part Ekmentaty SchOol •hen rdeittd Tuad9y in VH NU)'I told shoe&U~ ire wankd IOC' llullin& the thtc\'tS .&lll)ll'CnlJy dioOOea into the Los Allllda pol~ \Mt \be a.pie ~t\. \.:lf'Olina offK"Cr. anM'd rob- r60m from a onfoctrd foof'hltd\. were hc9ded for tht ""tach ""'... bay, 1 second k.iUi._ ia Ok1aboma • • • • • ... :.. .. said onua S..811ct. a._.. c:oa-ad&hc kiduppft&.. Pohcc rcmvtd • ~ that ·~ mandtt lo{ or... CouatY O>m· Tbc kidnap ,.ict,mAicllhe malus Mtt liahtlna mttT1 bombl °"for.. munatt0ns.-wtilC:\1Mecfl\e bUQ.. 11\U ltuot. 16. aftd h" ...... lilk'a. but aU wn qu.c1 whtft ofticen C\Jft to aocal law ettba::W ~. tOtftpillliOD IS Sha.MOii ~. 19. am\'Cd. • • • ac:s: l.olA~ara'piOlk't..-0 Wtt: 90u. are ~hi the: iWC1 woman •ho tiva W«i>-notiftfd. ....,..;t I ... Huntington m~ missing in Utah fo und unharmed ' .. ............ tconcludes th both parties agreeing o~ little MOSCOW (AP~~ikhait S; OorbKbev and ' t Rcapn Coetluded A>ur days of.summit talks IOday with ID impeSIC 00 I ~ auclear arms qrttrncnt aod dif-fcttnca on human ripq. Never· lhtn, the Soviet lcadtt called their mectin&s .. , btow to the foundationa o( the .Cold War" and Reapn said ·-we must not stop here ... Once they excha~ 1miles and handshakes. the two leaders held separate news confertnccs. an un- U5Ull event for Reqan but an unprecedented episode for Gorbachev on his home soil. The Soviet Communist PanyGcn- cnl Secretary took pleasure that Rcqan had disavowed his descrip- tion of the Sovie1 Union as an "evil empire." He not.Cd with satisfaction that Reapn did it "within the walls of the Ktemhn." Gol"bac:hev said that when R~pn tned to move h1m on human rights.. ''I said, ")'our explanations arc not convincina. •·• The Soviet leader said he also told Reagan his view of the Star Wars prosram as a strictly defensive system was "Just not serious." _ .R.eapn. m tum. muted tus cnu- cism of the Soviet system; he hailed Gorblchev's moves to open up his country's society and suaaested that Soviet refusal to permit thousands of dissidents to emigrate over a p..*liod of several decades m1pst be due m~ly to an unresponsive bureauc- racy. Asked at a news conference if he was lettina Go(bachev off too easy. Rcqan replied," I JUSt have to believe that 1n any son of government some of us do find ourselves bound 1n by bureaucracy." His comment raised eyebrows amons rcfu~niks an Moscow. "J think he's naive about lhat." uid Abe Stolar. "Maybe that's a bad word to ute, maybe 1t'SJUSt innocent." U.N. says 11 killed by Israeli tear gas JERUSALEM (AP} -A U.N. spokesman said today tear ~s fired by Israeli soldiers has killed 11 Palestinians. mcludma a scven-day- old infant. and has ~used dozens of misc::arriqcs sin~ an Arab upnsmg began six months ago. --~ New fiaurcs rc1cascd by Israeli officials. meanwhile. 1nd1cate the casu.alt) toll m the upnsma in the IJracl~upics temtoncs is rughcr than previously believed The army said Tuesday that 207 Palestinians had been killed, includ- ing I 57 by gunfire from Israeli soldiers. The United Nauons says 199 Arabs have been killed. 11 of them from teu gas. A left-wing legislator quoted a confidential document as saying 5, 133 Arabs have been injured since the uprisina began Dec. 8. Anodaet' refU1Cn1k, Tanya Zieman. also di...,-eed with Rct11n'1 expla· nation but uicl that pcrhapa R~n "just didn't want to •neer our side more. My fcdina is aa if' 10me qreement is ttacbtd and he does not want to hamper it by sayina nasty thif\&S." . Reqan and Gorbechev both vowed to persist in effons to neaotiate a new treaty callina for awecputa reductions in nuclear v.apons de- spite their inability to achieve a brnltthrou&h in four days in Mos- cow. The president 11id he hopes for an arms control qttemcnt by the end of Kis term in January toaupplerMnt the INF treaty that was fonnaJly rat1f~ durinf, hi$ four da)'S in Russia. But, he quick y added, ''I am dead set •inst deadlines." "We can look with optimis"l pn f uturc negotiations." he said, even he continllcd to defend his proposal for Star Wars, which has been a key stumbling block in superpower arms- control ncgouat1ons. .. The conversations are still going on and they arc still being discussed and I say pr~TCSs-is still be1n1 made or we wouldn t be talkina as~ arc." he said. But Rcaaan said "I honestly can't answer that question" when asked whether he thouJht he and Gorbachev would mti:t once more t1me:- On arms control, a JOtnt com- munique said the two sides had made pr<>&J'CS$-but not solved -some of the thorny P.roblems associated with cruise missiles fired from warplanes. and the monitorina of elusiv\! mobile missiles. Moreover. he said "we didn't &et anywhere" on perhaps the two bigcst obstacles to a treaty: keepina track of submarine-fired crui~ missiles and Soviet obJections to ~n's missik- defcnse program, popularly known as Star Wars PneldeatR~aad ecm.t~Gorbacbn embrace after .alP.Jac tiatennedlate ,_,. w•poaa bu. Rivalry between first ladies · renewed during ~useum visit· MOSCOW (AP) -The Iona· s1mmenn1 nvatry between Nancy Reagan and Raisa Gorbachev Oared up anew todiy, with the American fim lady Kknowt~n& they were in "Mexican standoff. Althouah the two women main- tained an appearance of cordiality and near-constant smiles during a brief tour of an icon storqe vault, their last one-on-one get-together of the Moscow summit erased earlier attempts to paper over the strained impasse that marks their rela- tionship. · .. , want to say something. I want to say something now, OK?" Mrs. Reagan cut an at one point as Mrs. Gorbachev attempted to stop the press from quesuonmg the Amencan first lady. Mrs. Gorbachev backed away, but pointedly looked at her watch as the U.S. first lady chatted a bit with members of the White House press corps. The incadcnt rec.ailed a similar one durinJ the December summit 1n Washinaton. when Mrs. Gorbachev lectured frequently on U.S. history. After Mrs. Rcapn arrived and the two women shook hands. Mrs. Gorbachev presented the first lady with a bouquet of roses and a large coffet-table style book of pictures from the pllery. . She also presented reponers with a copy of the same book, proposing that they give at to "whomever has covered tt}c summit best." Dozens trapped in W ~German mine blast By ne Aasoclated Press BORKEN. West Germany -An explosion ripped through a coal mine today in central West Germany, and police said a collapsed shaft was hindering efforts to reach 58 miners trapped more than 300 feet below ground. "I have no real hopes. I thank we'll have to bury a lot of pcoole," said Klaus Hausmann. a mechanic who has worked at the m me for 20 years. Mayor Bernd Hessler said rescuers briefly established radio contact with five trapped miners who reported they were unmJured before the radio lank was interrupted Earlier, rescuers tned uo!>uccessfull)' to establish contact with the trapped miners for nearly four hours. An eng1 neer fort he company that owns the hgn1te mine said initially that 56 miners were believed trapped by the 12: 30 p.m. blast. Later today. police said 58 miners were trapped. Sunken ship worth $3 billion KUALA LUMPUR. Malaysia - A sunken 16th centur) Ponuaue.se ship discovered off waters between Malaysia and Indonesia cames about $3 billion in gold and ~rcc1ous stones. a newspaper reported today. The haul 1s "believed to be one of the ~igcst lost treasures of the world.'' the chief m1n1ster of Malacca state, Abdul Rahim Tham by Ch1k, was quoted as sayina. The official. quoted by the daily New Straits Times, reported the treasure was on board the remains of Flor De La Mar. once the flaph1p of the Ponuiuese navy in the area. It struck a reef and sank in the Straus of Malacca in January IS 12 a few months after an 800.ship Portuguese armada capt~red the Malacca Sultanate. The ship. with a cargo he estimated at $3 billion, also carried Malay weavers and women, he said. Rahim said he had held t.alks with a salvage group this week. but would not identify the company or disclose fun her details about its location. the newspaper said "' Ethiopian president speaks out ADDIS ABABA. Eth1op1a -President Men&lstu Haile Manam denies his government 1s using f~ as a v.capon in northern provinces where secessionist tn· surgenc1es and crop fulures threaten the hves of 3.2 million people. For the first 11me. the Eth1op1an leader also accused Arab countncs of: backin& the rebel movement. He claimed the Moslem nations want to consolidate their control of the Red Sea. . . · IPUIAllZw. • TIUtmll F•a (!'e.,; ft) l'!e.e~~ ~ l • WFtRTllTY fltNQ£0 rt:RYES. BACll PAIC, AIITTlllTIS. • ~ Ml ~S l(JM)fM)l)S, ID1SD. !DI( NECK & ·-CMS. £Yl l«)S[. WlOO LOSS. QllT SIOltG & IClnHTllE lllTlm& ... 1111 lllllf f!Ol NfY PAIC Ga STIIESS AUTO. ACCUNTS, NI) llAl TM ~ lllOID....,U.l.ILI. Preliminary budgets clear committees, head for Legislature YOURSELF THIN CAL WEIGHT LOSS SACRAMENTO (AP) Prchmmary stale budgets that would spend at least $400 million more than Gov Gcorae Dcukme1ian wants arc read)' for votes in the Assembly and state Senate. • lnd1vtdualized programs • Emphasis on behavior modification mJt~s~p~~:cf:h~~~ :C~~:~:~f!'~ • As seen on cable TV throughout Orange County • Permanent results new st.at~ spcnd1na plan Tuesday. •WPORT WEl8HT LOSS SJITElll setting the stage for vot" in the Asscmbl) on Thursday and the 1441 Superior Ave., Ste. A IPD 848 09·44 Senate on Friday. NEWPORT BEACH UTlllAYI • Next week. a two-house conference ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ committee will bqan the real work of Discover Our Special Place fashioning a compromise, $44 balhon-plus state budact for the fiscal year that stans July l The Republican governor. mean- time. said Tuesday that the majority of Republican lcaislatorsare suppon- in& his budget plan which includes $800 m1lhon in tuaher business and income ta'<es. But he taid he's "willina to sit down and talk with leaislators about any perts of it that they would bke to d1scu11 with me." And state Controller Gray Davis said the-pen of DcukmeJtan's plan that would fruzc 1nf\a11on adjus~ ments in inco~ ta• brackets would cost California taxpayers an ad- ditional $5.7 billion over the next decade and result in increases as h1&h as 19 percent for some taxpayers for 1988. ··1t's been a cunous year," said Assemblyman John Vasconcellos, 0- San Jose. chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. "Every year the budget process is difficult. but some years pan1culartr, test our powers of deciS1on makina. ' said Sen. Alf red Alqu1st. ~n Jose, chairman of the Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Commmcc Both referred to the surprise in· come tax shonfalf that struck in late April. The Republican aovemor hJs proposed a $44.5 billion budget that would fill a potential $2.3 billion two- ycar fi"°al hoat. caulOd by an income tax shonfalf. His propoted bud&ct is balanced throu&h a combination of $800 million in encome and business tax incrcaSCI, S4SO million in 19Cnd· ing cuts. • SSOO m1Jhon reduction in the rcwrve and ute of more op. timistic revenue tstimata, Keepen guilty of elephantabame THE RIGHT CHOICE FOR YOUR RESIDEN- TIAL AND ASSISTED LIVING SERVICES. • DehDe tuitee. private &Dd eemi-private 1tudlol • ~tion to doc:ton and t1onaJ ectiviU. •• Warm 8Dd cariD1 nmrODment ~ • • 24 ..... llKurit)' and •taff ,SAN DlEOO(AP)-An invcstip- tion into •lltlations that Wild Animal Parle icepm abuled an African ekphana concluded that the fOur·ton beast was bca~n. but that the'indcknt was an isolalcd OM. J; D~Cts to have big say on VP nominee WASHINGTON (AP) -Jme Jeckeon expecll to "plaJ' a •trona role" in aelection of the Democratic vice presidential nominee but does ,not anticipeio havina veto po~ over that c~. Jacuon's conven· tion man11Cr said Tuesday. At the same time, Ron Brown, Washinaton attorney and DemC>- . cratic Pany activist, said he believes tk .election of Sen. Sam Nunn of Oeoqia "would not be~ &Ju.I sipal" to people wbo supponccf Jackson for prnidcnt. Brown 11id despite the fact that Massachus~ttl Gov. Michael Dukakis has all but clinched the presidential nomination Jackson still 1s runnina hard for the nomination and .. bristlnat discussion of the vice presidential nomination." But, said Brown. Jackson "clearly thinks he has earned and deserves strong considera11on" for the second spot on the ticket, if he is not at the top. Jackson, campaigning in New Jer-scr. put it just that way on Tuesday. "I ve earned consideration," he de· clared, thouah he declined to say whether he would accept the No. 2 spot if Dukakis wins the nomination and makes such an Offer. "He exP«t• lo play a ~uona r~lc 1f · he Is not lhe presidenual nom1net and is not the vice ptttiden~ial nomnintt in advi1in1 and countehnJ on the nominee for the vice prqi· dency," said Brown. • "Ht haa not indicated be ex~o to have a blackball of any'c:andidate, .. the convention manaaeuaid .. By limitina their count to only elected committed deleptci. the Jackson campaian is arauina that Dukakis will not have a .delcaite mltjority when the convenuon con- venes in Atlanta in July. "We count ·su,P.Ct deleptes' ~s uncommitted until they cast their vote on the ballot for president." said Brown. "Super delcptes" are peny and eleetcd official$ who became automatic, uncommiued delcptes outside the pnmary and caucus process. . • Brown, whose appointment as convention man11er for Jackson .was hailed by pany leaders who t~k It as assurance that Jackson was opuna for a conciliatory role, cautioned that "my involvement is being played too positively. I'm not sure it's1oin1 to be as easy as some people think:' Disease status sought for those carrying HIV WASHINGTON (AP)-The Na- tional Academy of Sciences said today the hundreds of thous.ands of Americans unknowingly infected with the AIDS virus should be considered as sufferina from a disease even if they don't have full-!Qle AIDS. "Vicwina HIV infection as a dis- ea~ is iinponant because 1t may eventually be amenable to t~tment and'"patienls will need to be diagnosed and treated as early as possible," the academy said an a rcpon. The report based its recommen- dation on what 1s now "sc1ent1fically conclusive" evidence that the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV. causes AIDS. "From a public health perspective the important event 1s infection rather than f ull·blown disease be- cause even asymptomatic infected persons are capable of infecting others." it said. But the rcpon also called for a federal law to prevent discrimination aaainst people with the AIDS virus. And althoufh it encouraaed more voluntary testma to act better mfor- fnauon on the maanitude of the ep1dem1c. the repon says mandatory testing "is currently appropnate only for blood, tissue and orpn dona· tions" and specifically says testing should not be a requirement for ectting a marriage liccn~. Theodore Cooper. ch11rman of the committee. told a new' conference the call for ant1-<11scnminat1on legis- lation "mi&ht be the first among equals" of several recorrlmendat1ons becau~ it is at the roo of so many other objccll ves Economy ~hawing ilo signs of slowing down WASHINGTON (AP)-The gov- ernment said today its chief fore- cast1na gauge of economic activitY. rose a moderate 0.2 percent in Apnl in what amounted to a siinal of steady cconO!T'iC VOwth with no danger ofa recession this year. The Commerce Dcpanment said its Index of Leading Indicators rose for the third consecutive month. following a revi5cd 0.2 percent March increase and a l.S percent February surie. the bigest pin in more than two years. Economists said the perfonnance of the leading index was entirely consistent with their belief that the economy was headed for its best year since 1984 as smokestack America benefits from a boom in eitpon sales . All of this should be good news to Vice President Gcorsc Bush. who ho'pcs to benefit from a feeling among voters that the Reapn admm1s- trat1on 1s managing the economy well. The March increase had on11nally been rcponed as a much latacr 0.8 percent nsc. Analysts had expected both the big downward revision to the March figure and the small mcrca$C inApnl ~ They sa1d the pins reflected a· return to more normal econo · activity followma a roller-coaster penod af\er the October stock market crash. Fears of a recession this year have tariely evaporated as the economy shook off the JOit from the market collapse to tum m surprisin&)y strona growth for this advanced st.qe of a fi ve-)'ear-old economic recovery. Duarte reportedly suffers from a 'malignant' disease By TIM AaMda*-1 Presa WASHINGTON -Salvadoran President Jose Napoleon Duarte was at Walter Recd Army Medical Center today for treatment of what he described as. a $lomach disease "of a mahanant nature.'' The 62·ycar-old prc!ldent. who faces a stubborn civil war and a crisis within his Christian Democratic Pany. has been rumored to be suffering from cancer. but he did not use the word m describina his condition. Duarte was taken to Walter Recd immediately after his :srrival Tuesday ni&ht at Andrews Air Force Base outside of Washinaton, accordina to a spokeswoman at the base. HospiUl spokesman Pete Esker said late Tuesday that Du.Inc had been admitted. but said he had no information abOut the SAlvldoran president's condition. PrfWa•nt women tested without consent CHICAGO -Up to 240 prqnant "'omen wert &iven a drua linked to birth defects without their knowle<tee as part of a Study, and officals are conside!ina discipli~in1 the researchers. Dtlantin, a dtua commonly uled to treat epilepsy. was aaveo by two Cook County Hospital anesthesiol()l.isll to about .245 ~nt WO!'f'Cn to determine whether it could reduce fetal &uas in Caesarean births, bospttaJ spokesman Tc~n~ Hansen .. id Ti&aday. Five of the women had consented to penicipete in the hospital-approved atudy from Se~~ !91~ throuah ~anuary, said Or. Robcn MiJltr, chairman of the ~ital & tc~nt1rec COf!1m1tttt. The otheT women Yttre 1Jven the drUa without lMir knowledie and without approval from the hospital's review bottrd •id Milltt',_ wbo, unlike HanltD, Mid be undetllood that only aomc of l1'ctt appro"1m1~ly 240 women were prepant. Rem•Ja• ol 40tll Green River victim lo1UJd sEATTLE -Rcmaiu d .. up this wtek art thole of lhC Grwtl Riftf ~lier's 40th vkt.im. but the commander of tbc ~b for ik n1tion'1 wont known terial lulkf says it01 ualilldy the find will leld to 1 twakthroup in U.C ,, aix·year-old cue. Tbe bona anil lkull of Dtbfl Lorraine Es1es.. a nanaway 1Wbo loftl Md beeft feared a vied• of die killer, wett k»ntificid T.-y ~ dtfttal rccordl. In additM. to tM 40wotM11 bown dad. eitb• miuiltct~ arr h*d • .,..... victi1111 orw killtt, "° fftiqum1ty dullUMd . in dusacn in ~ all 8lld aouu. of Settdt. • ~ With mlClkationa and bethinr •Wallltoah~.,.._ •Wt Olfei' can for ,our kmd Ont •~YoU vacation~..__- 10.vicl HCft)et. a wildhfe sptcialist with the Humane Society of the Un1ttdS..tn.rached hitcondusicm Tuclday after mecli~ Wirh tm• -,,.O}lffl orme-wna :.\n1mil Pii\: and ·l'!~il~e.!'.-!~:=::--:a ... ~,.,~,~···'!· .. ~U.dl 5·71•r-oJd.,_,, •• .,.,. TAMPA. AL -s..c-a lodly COM~ I 12-Mur opcmioa 10 ..... I S.J• old bon"-11r11t lMe .a~ CMll by I coa~Wt ..... to --..:•AP-a~ .. , .... llil. n.t bOy 'Win CTlial --------Its litter fadlil)'. ~Sen Diflo~ 1ht lnridcftt aho h under t. ~ ~ lii Su DW8o ffumlM ~. Midi ii UtlCOftW ... to Hnei01~~1111 U.S. ~~~----ii ....... , .............. OMr.-1111 lfMit - l!l'J19:ll·.W Mitt K...._ ,,,.,._ •T~ GeMra1 = .......... :t.:. ~ ....... ..., ..... , ....... ., * 1•1111 •:t."'':"~.·.--··-·· II. ........................... . IJ:JIE . ~ ......... ,., ..... ..., •• ... l!!M, .... cttll1~ ......................... 1 •• ......... MICOHt,ai• ... - . . ·" .. .... . ' • --- Better health for paralyzed-people 'rtr-~--~ ., MAllDA .UCllU ............. , '2 Research parcPera Jerrold Petrofsky and Janni Smith share two aoals: to impron the health and enhance the hves of people aufferina from paral)'Jis. But the two view their pis from different pc11~ives. Petrofsky is a hi&Jdy publiazed raea«h 1eientill wfio first drew national attention throu~ a "60 Minutes" story about his walklna system for pllaraplqica. Smith, Petrofsky's 33-year~ld re-search associate, sees the problem of paralysis from the conrmes of • wheelchair. II WIS the first ... 60 Minutes .. proaram (there have since been four more seaments fcaturina Petrofslcy, and> television movie, "First Steps") in 1982 that led Smith to Petrofsky. She was a third-)ear pre-med student working as an intensiv~ nurse and aerobics instruc10r in HOUllOn in 1990 wbco she became the victim of a bizam alllliution plot Smith was traini111 for a man· thon when a sniper ftred four bullets into her t.ck. leavina her oualyzed from the chat down. 1T'fl0 men ultimately went to prilOft for the attack. Aftet betna releued from the hospital, Smith decided the best way to make the mOll of her life was to ·continue athletics. Sbe entered wheel- chair road races. becomiq a tupcr· star b)' winnina the Detroit Free Press Marathon three consecutive yean. But despite her intense physical marathon tninina, Smith's· health staned to decline. "Although 1 sot into &ood cardiovascualr sbaP.'.C and developed strona arms, l stall saw "'Y body witherin& away, ft did nothins.for my sclf~teem. so 1 started lookina for tielp," Smith said, la her xarch fOr JOmCOne to help her repin her physical svenath, Smith said she met a lot of quacb, as well.as a number of scientists whom lheexpects will contribUte to the field in the future. But it wu not until 11\e met Petrofsky that she found a prosram that could help her weak- ened muscles. Petrofsky, 39, was director of the Nutonal Center for Rehabilitation Enaineerina 11 Wriaht Uol"enity in Dayton, Ohio. There, the pc:ofnsor of eQ&ineerina and · physioJoiy de- veloped the Functional Electronic Sttmulation system. ) Tbe system sends a computerized electrical current that forces pua- lyzed muscles to conuact. Because the muscles move under their own power, they can strcncthen to the same dqree as normal muscles. Smith contacted Petrofsky and eventually moved to Dayton to partici09te an has teSeafb. Petrofsky is You're Invited to a Class in-·criminal Law Western State University has scheduled a free introductory class in criminal law in south Orange County on Tuesday, June 14, 1988, beginning at 7:00 pm. This popular class is designed for those considering a law careerr Seating is limited and reservations are required. For reservations and information, caH an admissions counselor today at WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY College of Law • (714) 738-1000 1~1 tNorth State College Boulevard Fullerton, CA 92631 Safe, .Cleati. Water ... On Tap \ I I , Pure or purer than bottled water. Free-flov»flll from ~ur kitchen taµ. You'll Ret)er run out. I You'll Ret)er buy bottled water again. A~ ed. in water technology. WXJ'ER SENTRY S\':STEMS ~ purflies 8t ~ ordUwry tap Wlltl:r': • ~ t.rmlul oootamimots ~.aluminum. nt-ca. etc.) found Jn our •'Idler eupj>ly. _ • ~ rid al the foul tu1e and lmCll ol chbim ~our speclaJly ~ ~ \ • ne.troya and ~ ·~ ol aD ~ and ,1ru9c1t In ...,. .. our llpOCiaDy ........... ultra·vtc>kt lljltt IY*'11· • • And mau. w.-.-. can and P>dClllCllC---· ••• Q\LL"'NOW! (714) 855-i633 ~more .a,fe, clean~ On tap. . probably best kno""n for his walkina system. The system is bued on h11 FES "Yfork. He pmered national attention in 1983 when his researcb subject. Nan. Davis. a peraplqic. ..._lked to get her diploma ~ Wri&ht Uni'iersity. ~ walking system works by havina the patient sisnat electrical • impulSC'S to surface electrodes at· tad\Cd to the lcp "ia small swhcbes on a balancing aid. A special kind of underwear incorporates the wires into the fabric. The muscle contrac- tions do the walkina. althou&h braces arc worn for added stability. Accord· ina to Smtth, the system bas pr:o-&rtsscd a long WI)' since its irutial Torm. when the patient was attached to a computer the size ofa house door and could only take a few steps. In fact, the S)Stem has evolved into a compact. 3-pound unit that enabled Sm a th to -.alk seven males 1n the I 91S Pleue ~ P&TltOf'SKY /A8) .................... Jama! 8mlth attac•• wbeelclaalr-boaad ...._ 9altll (Do relation) to a compater~ntrolled e:se:n:l8er. A prescription for fatigue Doctor, I am tared all the time. I just don't seem to have anf energy. That complaint as as old as the hum.an race. It 1s the perpetual challenge of £iv1n1 to set the body. with an ats complicated metabobc machinery, to do what the mind wants. What a task Often the body Just can't do 1t and JO'f'ccl fauauc Fat11ue 1s the first symptom of most diseases but m1lhons suffer from chroruc.lat11ue for which there 1s no known cause When this ts the case. at 1s best to look to nutntJon to try to adJust the body's metabolism much as you would tune up an automobile enpne, Here 1s a partial hst of nutrienu ] that have relieved fatigue an some sufferers: •PANTOTHENIC ACID Fatisue is the most common symptom of deficiency of this nutrient. as· well as . ansomma, sullenness and dc~ion. There as almost no toxicity to this 8- com{>lex nulnent. so supplement.a· tion as extremely safe. •VITAMIN Bil. In the past. 812 JULIAN WHITAKER injections were a mainstay of the acnenl prxuuoner and they seiemed to pve patients more eocrsy. Lately, this practice has fallen out of fa and most physmans scom 11., claa - 1ng 1t 1s onty a placebo. However. a study published 1n the Bnll umal of Nutrition, inJecuons o 812 in a placebo<ontrollcd tnal id indeed increase the e~y lev of pauenu suffenna from fat1g •MAGNESIU Tlus amponant mineral 1s fortheproducuon of ATP, biah ~ compound that body UteS for all eneraY umana reactions. In athletes, it ts parucularfy im~runt to supplement because sweating can cause maa- nesium deoletion,· In one study • maancs1um' supplementation re- lieved fatigue in 198 out of 200 people. .. • V IT AMlN C. This vawniD is not generally use for treatment of fatisue. but one study of 411 women found that there was an an verse relationship between vitamin C intake ud fatisue, The number offallfUC sym~ tomi mong the low v1tam1n C usen Ciouble that amona tbe relatively tah usen of v1tam1n C. As promised. this is only a putia1 llSl of the nutritional phannacoloc that has been brou&bt to bear on t& problem of chronic fati&ue. Actually, ~hen one considen the ownbe:r of ways our metabolic systems can ao awry because ofunbelanoed nutrient intake. it seems almost miraiculous that any of us can lt'l up in the mornin&. JU5t remember, fatipc lllta for which there is DO specifac disease can and should be treated with methods that enhance our metabolic systems. It ma) take some time, but •bat other approach CID there be1 Blame the stars and the planets Canderclla and Sleeping Beauty ~ch knew her pnnce would come someday. and he did. Talk about lack of asscn1on. Neither had to do anylhina but -.111 for her fate to unfold. It's aJI tn the stars. acrordmg to fairy-tale phalosoph) But Wilham Shakespeare d1savecd "'The fault. dear Brutus, as not m our stars.. but m ourselves. .. Astroloey fans seneralh don't care about Shakespeare's ideas. The) JUSt ao ahead and check then horoscopes daily. The popularhty of astroloCY as IS arcat toda> as it was m ancient Bab)lonia In spate of the massive l.1111 liciZJ scientific evidence we have now that it should be dismissed IS a harmless parlor game. ifs sun aved all the way to the White Hou~. apparently. In a recent issue of Humanist Mapzine. researchers Peter Gltck and Mart Sn)-der say that everybody loves the idea of mag.i.c. But. \hey say. a hOf'OICOpc ma)' simply be a pnm1· tiv~xlf..ful(aJlina prophecy. When a full moon and stransc behavior do So ~ (evea b)' chance), believers tend to take notioc, and to confirm their hunches. .. The probJem with such reaon1na IS that people fail to take D0tt of events that discontirm their belief - sucb as all of the times they witness strange behavior TOtien the moon is not full. or ~hen the moon is full and nothing out of the o~ happens.·· sa) Ghck and Syndt;r Bche,ers an astroloey and fonune rookies think that one's fate is Pleueeee ALGAZl/A8) You've Tried All The Wrong Ways To Lose Weight .. / ' .. - Mellencampstlrs emOtlons In lrvlaeMeadow:s concert ljJODaOOI ....... 0 f .._, aocaa appeuucet bY Bruce Spri..-eandJobnCoUpr Mdlen- '°two. rocten ,headina in dilfeteat directioM. b many yean for: his 1 ~ mthusium and sponi. ~ty, Sori.GDteen has now drifted UllO a.U.of ooml>lacencY-maybe ,evea ~ Hii latest "Tunnel of Love tour....., disa~nudly lack· inc in el«tricty. Many ofhis Jon,time fl.i\1 are still wonderiDf what bap- pe-ned to the tll«W ~that Ute to · mate his live performances lb cap- tiv1t.i.QS. f.arly in bis career, John Coupr was a tatbtr qocentric individual who wanted to be a rock star in the •orst way. Lack.lnJ in both maturity and musical vision, the Indiana native wts cpnvinced that foraettablc tunes "Hun So Good," "I Need A .Lover," and .. Jack and Diane" were bu ticket to the·b11 time. But several years qo, a funny thin& happened. Coupr pew up both musically and emotionally. As be &ot in touch with bis roots -and that nf our nation -Jolin went beck to usi!'I bis re.at surname or Mellencamp and bas ti~ recorded two outstandina aJbumL A tbcqbtluJ WOrt of'subaanco and iU&bt. ~Melleacamp's lalelt "The Lonaome Jubilee" is hQi1Jalid rock at its finest. With folk and C~un fllvori~ the music ia simul- taneously rich and tApao.ive •bile brinsina to bfe vipet1CI about troubled people Livina in troubled times. At a sold-out IJ'\line Meadows concen Friday niaht. Mellencamp and his sterlina nine-piece bend performed for lYz hours like they were on a mission to prove somethina. Mellencam~ srainy but passionate vocals conviction to bis themes ofs:/! aod faith. As a meta r for the simple but ennchina va ues of bard work that is the backbone to the heartland's way of life, Mellencamp nixed the usual stasc props to allow the sbCCf' power of the sonp to carry the show. Only occasional dancina and pra:ncina offered anythiq in the way of a visual presen talion. la die first oi two teta. the band CQnceDttatcd on material ctriwn pri.. marily rrom 198''1 .. Scarecrow" and last )'Mr•s .. The Lonesome Jubilee" recordi'!P-Si~ tbde sonat ~ ~ •. political and IOciaJ di .. 1Uusionmcn1. a disquietina mOod eme!JCCI that snduaOy ~ in in· tcnsuy. From this ponioa. bipliahts in· eluded ''Chcclc It Out.• a catchy number that mixes simple lyrics with dynamic shifts in tho muslc•s texture and tempo: .. Rain on the Scarecrow," an aqry aonc about shattered dreams on the Ammcan farmland (elevated even biper by the iHcins diflicuJt-to- play notes delivered try electric fid- dler Lisa Germano) and the coneert's most inspirational selection -"The Real Life." A fieree declaration of renewed independence, "The Real Life" cried out for people to pave their own path to fulfillment: "My whole life r've done what rm supposed to do/Now I'd like to maybe do somctbin1 for mysclf/Andj~stassoonas J fllureouf what that is/You can bet your life that l'm gonna Jive it hell." - Crenna'finds new fame With 'Rambo·' ., ll091'llOMAI .................. LOS .\NOELB -It aJJ stanM when KM'k DoUllu walked out on 1 mo~ bofore the~ rolled. Now rd Crenna ftnds himldf in what COa&ld amount &o 1 lifetime job: u mtetor·fither flaure to the lnvin· cable Rambo/"' Sure·to·please burners like Richanl ctrcnna is no stranaer to "Crumbliftf Don," "R.O.C.K. In the atiow world. At 61 be has cJOcked the U.S.A. "Authority Sona." and a half-<:ientuf)' UI perfonntt, startina .. Pink HouteS" were playc(t with u a radio actor at 11. ,11 enoup austo and celcbntion to work ''I was playin1 six or seven runnin1 the crowd into• frenzy. roles at the same time; onoe I.did • But it was t~ dance-<>riented nine," he m:alled. "Cherry Bomb .. th.at nearly s&olc the He is 1 veteran of films ("The Sand show; Its beat wu so infeclioU5 that ~bblcs, .. "Body Heat") and teJe.. even one of the normally Gestapo-vision (':Our Miu Brooks.•• "The like security staff sot caulht up in the · Real McCoys"), but nothin .. prepared fun. Ocarly ncalectina his d\ltaet, this him for the impact or the 'Rambo" youn' man spun and then danced movies starrina Sylvester Stallone. away into a sea of JYT'ltina bumanjty. "The audienoe·s perception or you I must admit one thin&. I never as related lo what you are on the thoupt rd SCC the day Wbcn John screen,•• he Obtef\'cd. "rve been a Coupr Mellen<;amp would put Bruce chameleon in my career; the audience Springsteen (who. odd!r enouah. never kno~s where they're aoins to Joined in on Thursday nif.lt's encore find me. Jhey lift a rock and there's of "Like A Rolhna Stone· ) to shame. Crel'l'aL But for now. the Boss is lagg.ina .. 'Ramt?o• has brou&ht a new kind . behind a man who·s definitely play-of recognition. When you're waJkina ina for keeps. down the streets of New York and you're in a terid like ~ Rea.I McOo)'I\• ~want o cake y_ou bOcne Ud sivc you_ a berbecUe. ~ ye>u Dlay an authority ftaute 11 I did 1n the 'Sla~'I Peopk' sirics, they II)', 'Good afternoon. Mr. Crenna, are you er\joyina your trip?" ~------MN ow rm aemnc hard hits •• stories up yellin1 down, 'Hey, Rich, what•a happenin'? Where did you leave Rambo?' •• Crcnna•s role u Col. Trautma0 bas been bOtb complementary and coa- trastin1 to John Rambo: the lOli<:al. level-headed commander, and" the impetuous fi&htina machine. Traut· man usually ~ows up bd'ore or after the action. but not in "Rambo Ill." "ln this film for the first time, Rambo and Trautman a.re in action toaethcr," Crenna said. "I wa1 rqre- warncd by Sly, who c.a1Jed several months before we started and eaid, 'You better act in shape, Crcnna. beCause I'm aoina to show you what it's like to do wh*t I have to do.• "I said, 'No. you're k.iddins. I'm too old to be runnin1 up and down mountains: He said, 'Get in Utape.' So for three month1 I got in shape, and thank God I did. Because it was a vef)', very difficult pi~" "I LOVE 'WILLOVV: .. Enthralling and l>Nutlfully produced .. -C...,,rr-ICAK TV PETROFSKY AND SMITH PLAN RESEARCH CENTER ••• From AS .. A TAU Of MAGIC that leaves a friendly glow." 5he.i. ..._ cos ANC.QJS 'IMS Honolulu Marathon. "We've come a long way from five steps to seven mil«. But the system needs to be put into perspective. It is nota substitute forfunctionin1 leas. It is pot our Joal to make people waTk. It is our aoat to make them healthy. h is not a cure or answer to paralysis - what it i. is an option," Smith explained. ~-• -~~ -·-· -:___ r "COLOR8" (!It) ...,Mill s-lS-7 Jt. I HI "aHAKEDOWN" ( .. )I'_. J} .. AllOVE THE LAW" Ul>l;a.IUt "FfUDAY THE 1STH PA.RT Yr (9') .... 1 ... Ht ..... /YOW PIAYllYG T O W~Cf NTfP • ' •. " • . ~ 5 , . 4 , 84 I .. • • • • ., -• . . . ••WILLOW" (PQ) , ....... The most sisruficant i;>roblcm as.- sociated with spinal cord mjury 1s not the paralysis itself but what Smith calls secondary medical problems. "Pressure sores from lack of circulation and muscle atrophy along with kidney and bladder problems - .. COLORl"CR) ... J..-t 'es. .. "CROCOOILE DUNDEE H" (PQ)lllPUE l:IS-Uf.lt-45 .. RA..o•"<"I mu.a. s.•7 lS-t.Jt.1130 Z!""'AY THE 1mt n . r (II) M z.tM-.1 .. "FATAL lltO Z lb-5 90-7 lb IUO A TTRACTIOW' ("111'61*7~ '"0000 MON•tG YIEllWr "'CflOCOOLI DUNDEE I" ------------<& Ot>HUJt.IM "ROD (N) 11> NSE "WIUOW" """llUEI" f'QQ) U:tM·JU4S S:.U.•lt:H '"~·-mo "RA•O 11r· (R) "CROCOOLE DUNDEE It" ____ l_l ... _Z_·ttt-7 lO at-oe STAUCll (PO) II> NSSlS "CROCODILE DUHOEE H" 12 IS-2'JM~7•tts-11 H 6 ls.l.Jt.lt:45 (l'O) 1111 'ASE ___ "CR_OC_OOILE--DUNDEE---r--• II 15 I lb-l 4S-6ie I 15 It lb "RA•O Ill" <"> (PG) II> PUE STAllOll "CROCODILE DUNDEE H" II IS-1· .. Hs-t~H·l•• 4-45-7 .. ttS-11 15 ('°) 111 PlSSrS --.. -C-R_OC_._OOIL--1-DUNDE ___ l;...1_"_ 1115-1JOHS-HOl15 ltlb 1.\.-0 fl" (!It) (PQ) • HSE SUUOll .. RAM80 lff" (" ) lll~Ut·HM:iN.l~l•_. 445-7*' 15 11 15 11 •S Z'tM 15-4 •HS-IUS .. ; . - that's what we have to worry about. And much of that can be prevented by keeping the muscles strona throu&JI exercise," she said. With research financed with feder- al money, Petrofsky explained, any products produced arc considered public domain. Companies therefore arc apprehensive about producing a product that can be marketed by everyone. To take has system from "research to reality," in 1986 Petrofsky moved his base of operations from Dayton to Irvine, acccpuna an appointment at UCI. Smith, a native Californian. moved with him. One of Petrofsky and Smith's lonJ- terrn pis is about to materialize in the form of a research center they plan to open in mJd-July. Described by Smith as a cross between a health club and a cntical care center, the clinic will house all of Petrofslcy•s exercise equipment. ''We caJI it Casa Corazon. house of hcan. It will be a partnership between a clinic and research facility. A son of health IY"' for paqlyz.ed people IO their muscles can be brouaht up to normal size and health," Smith said. The clinic will be dcsi1ned so clients can act on and off the machines without assistance, CROCOOILa DUNa.a II 11"9) o" 2 ScrHn1: 11:50 12:50 2: to S" 10 4:JO 1:30 7:00 l!OO t 1:tO 10:30 ·No l'11Ses •Alll90 PART HI (al On 2 ScrffnJ: 11:10 '21302:111111 4 :41 5:4 51:1S •• u 1:45 10:21 WLU>W(N) In 70mm 11 •U 2r204:117 10 10.15 STANO ANO DCLIW.R(R) 5•40 7:4 0 1·4~ SHA.KaDOWM (IU 2 :30 7135/Allon tfte uw 1"112:.20 5,oe 1CllOO althou&h th.ere will be staff arcutatin& in the racility ifanyonedcsires hdp. In addition to exercise equipment, the clinic will havt a comrlcte medical staff and clients wil be monitored at all times. Oients' input will also affect Petrofsky's research. "This kind of research is never completed. Th~ is always room for improvement As people use the machines we will set a better under- standina of which ones work and which need alterations,·· Petrofslcy said. The walkanf system will be demon- strated June 0-12 at Abihues Expo '88 at the LA. Convention Center. ALGAZI •.. Jl'romA5 controlled by the planets and that there is little one can do to chanat it An individual is 11ven little credat or allowance for free will. Carried to its extreme, we are off the hook for cverthing we do -good or bad. It's just lhe fault of the heavens, we can say Temfic. The fitlt believers were said to be the ancient Chaldeans and Babylo- nians who recorded their observa- tions of the stars around 3000 B.C. Soon the stars and planets came to be rcprded as supernatural bein~. Therefore. in order to learn the wdl and intentions of the &ods. man was called on to develop a way to 1------------------------------1 understand and interpret the pos- itions of the stars. --lit\-....... [_ .._, (11 .. Sll lMIO ..... ,_ ... ,.. •LA ... MIC F-."""' ..... UA.,.._ .,._......, ·--~ •1.4--IU.. 911---~ l'lllkt _...,I •mlTAmA •~llM:ll Mt Olll U>lttl ._°"""' .-ow. C... •UIUIA IUCll ·---••IWI& Mt-l•• (71•1Mtlm f .... S...C.. i-°"'""v..., UAT•a... •caTAmlAIOAC-~ 4171111 *"''° _.. LAKEWOOD CENTER k.~ lU/$311511 ... , tft80l•All' MOeM caoc:ootu DUNDll 'Arr H tN1 lllH >JI ltt' t Jt n• ,.., ..... ...,noa -UIUt I ---WfU.OW tN1 ,,,.. Mt .... , ..... ,. • ftA ITIMOn"t "°"" · IMSA"' .... "' .... , ... "" , ___ ,.,__) lAtllRADA lllU .... U =.:-:.. 714,,...t • ~., mUOIPMH. MOUN CaGCODfLI DUNOll 'MT It tNI It.• 1111 "" J•t ltlU DWWW la ··-WIUOWINI .,,,. ...... "1.t• fRNMl1'Jl UTN ,.... !1~. • I~ • •ATM ATTIACTION • ,, ..... ,.,.. ... , .... llTUllN TO llilOWY tMa 'MT M. '"'&.-. • ~ ............ TMMl ... Ne AUAY"'t ........ , ... Rational people have come to understand that the whole astrol<>&ical concept depended on the mistaken belief that the Earth is the center of the universe. So why then could n be 1mponant to President Rcapn that he sec himself as an "outaoin1 and cunous Aquarian"just hkeAbraham Lincoln and Franklin Roosevelt? I can't help but think about the imposter syndrome. I've listened to too man)' new CEO's or vice presi· dents of finance worry about their "real" ability to do the job. Those that secretly consult their charts before makina imponant decisions say they can use all the help they can set. I 1uess that can also be so for a Prcs1dent of the United Stat«. RUFFELL,S UPHOLSTERY llC • ... ,_ .... C..... lertl tm -llW .. CISTI llU-SU.l lM c... .......... ,...,. .......... -......., t•..,,. ,... ,.,teclly ~DEN'S ''A~ ..., .. . . .... au .. to~. WMCA (N.Y.) . .. ., ~~:N~~ndc;~cy h~!~.!ul endoled Column. by Melva Anlitii While men can be co-dependents. aOoearcd in the Sacramento Btt. i -women arc far more susceptible. "I believe rour millions of readen could think we're culturally proanammed ro benefit from it. Do you qree? If' so, be the caretakers," said uiaer. "It p~ue-print it. -A SAC ARA MEN· seems natural f'or women to sacrifice TO READER. . them5Clves fort~ family." DE.All UCIUMENTO: I ... S. Co-dependent behavior is not re- .._,....., fw....,... it-. Jtncted to panncrs of alcoholics. Any BREAKING THEhCLE chronic problem. from gambling to· OF CO.DEPENDENCY to control the other pc.ton's behav-overeauna or a history oflosinaJobs. Jene uiaer crinaes every time the ior, while assumina responsibility for can produce co-dependency 1n a sons .. People" comes on the radio. that person's needs.\ · partner. It has an addictive quality When Barbra Streisand warbles, She pve u an example the woman that makes 1t almost harder to ••f!rst you're .~a!f• ~ow you're whole," whose "husband has ionen sick from disconnect from than alcohol. u1gtr says, 1t s hke an anthem for • drinkina and passed'<>ut on the floor The cure for co-dependency 1s to co-dependents." at 3 a.m. Not only dbcs she clean up first detach )Ourself from the rtla- u11er, a licensed clinical social the mess and put him mto-bed. SM ttomht1). Th~ ts easy t&"Satbul hard worker, says the concept of co-sets the clock for 6 a.m. so she can call to do"Lct htm feel the pain and deal dependence came out of the field of his boss with an !excuse for her with the consequences.' alcohol abuse, where s~utes of husband's absence. 1 The second step 1s·learnin1 'lo take alcoholics were called • co-depen-"There 1s noth1•1 wrong W1lh carcof)oursclf lt's hke lookinJ1ntoa de~ts." Throuah the yc.n, the defi· helping," u1scr said. "but co-de-mirror and aoina for ~ourself all the nitlon has broadened. pendency 1s helping to the extent that things )OU0 \C been doing fer him .. lt'sabout relationships and lettina you lose yoursetf in'lhe process. The Zeiser also recommends counscl- the other person's behavior affect ~o-de~ndentthink~ she's being help-ing and groups such as Al-Anon: r.our self-esteem," Zciaer e~plain~. ful, but she's on~ postponing ~r "You must learn to say. ·1 refuse to 'h 's also be1n1 obsessed with try101 partner's inev1t.ab{e facing up to the rescue you a.n~ more · ·• HORO SCO PE 'n8"41ay,Jne% ARIES (March 21-April 19): Emphasis on power, authority, abilit_y to ------------ meet deadline . Focus on intensity, love rclat1onsh1p. s chance to hit YONEY financial jaclcpot. You arc seriously o being considered for IAll promotion .I•••••••••••• Capncom involved. TA UR US (April 20.May 20): Good lunar aspect coincides with philosophy, pohtical activity, travel, communicauon. More people will be drawn to you. love will cease to be a stranaer. You'll act credtt denied two weolcs ago. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Focus on depth. perception, inve1tiption of mystery, private detective work. You Will set new de.I. chance to be in on around floor. Hiahhaht independence, creativity. innoY&lion, origmahty. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Flmlly relationships dominate. You'll be concerned with lepl affairs, commitments. cooperative efl'ons. partnerships., mat· nage. Contract offer requires anotb(.r sianaturc. Aquanan involved. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Diversify, give full play to int~llcctuaJ curiosity. Investment made recently will now pay dividends Member of OpPOsite sex becomes vahable ally Open lines of communication. Gemini featured. VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22): Favorable Moon aspect comcid~ with breakthrouah. arcater CTCat1ve freedom. You'll have more to say about your own work, endeavors. YounJ people also fit mto pattern. Scoq.io will faiuic prornancntly. .. LIBRA (Sept. 23--0ct 22). Focus on completion of transaction. prQperty value~ relations with older mdlVld- ual, possibly parent. Gain indicated through creative efforts, especially writing. Sense of drama. showmanship turf aces. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21 ): Domestic adjustment featured, could include lifestyle, personal surroundings, acquisition ofart object or luirnry item Relative unparts message, could involve shon tnp. Taurus plays role. SAGmARJUS {Nov. 22-0cc. 21). Pia) waiung pme Someonewantssomethmgof .. aluebascdon verbal promise. Get 1t 1n wntirig. Protect 1>0ssess1ons and reputation. Be a hard barga1~er. Look behind scenes for ••true answers." CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Emphasis on timing. structure, design, verification of views. plans. Judgment and intuition on target, but ad~1t1onal funding requ1rtd. Spotliaht on contacts with bus1t;tess-onented people. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. I~): Fimsh what you start. reach more peOJ>le, have frank <l1scuss1on m connection with romance. Secret 1s revealed · will ultimately work to your advaniaae. Recent burden ~II no lengcr eiust. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 2~: Scenano h1ghhghts speculation. romance, fnends, aw1rations. You'll get what you want through charm. utt1,1zauon of powers of persuasion. Romance, recently dimmed, will be revived Leo featured. IF JUNE! IS YOUR BIRTHDA i~ou have knack for dealing with public. for det~t1ng tre ds and cycles, for appealing to women. Your mother ha areater influence on you than did father. you have gourmet appetite despite d1gesuve problem Capncom . Ca~ people pla) important roles in your life. Vou arc loyal, determined, sensual, ideahsuc, romantic. You'll be\on more sohd emotional around 1n June. Travel ll\cicased soc~I act1v1ty for }OU m July. October also memorable in 1988. I TV L 1')1 ING '.) - -- 6:00 II ...,.. D ..... • ...._ D ..... By C8ARLES GOREN and OMAR SHARIF Both vulnerable. West deals. NORTH • '. 5' \) AK7' 0 K 3 • QJ 3 WEST EAST • K 2 • Q J JO 7 y 8 3 6 2 ' C Q 9 I S 4 : J JO l • A 10 6 ' + l 9 S l SOUTH •A 6 3 \) Q J 10 9 s ¢ A 7 6 •• 7 The bidding: Wat N°"' Eut South Pus 1+ Pus 1 ~ Pua 2 'V Pus 4 v Pus Pua Pua ()penina lead: Five or 0 L.M. Bo vo --- No beauty parlors in the outback Women arc in the m1nont}' among the Australian abon11ncs. the EsJumos and the Todas of Southern India. Students of such matters note the women of these societies do not tend to &USS) up with makeup and Other artificial embellishments. In· fercnce is.: What you see 1s what )OU set. and if you do n't hkc 11. go to the end of the line. Oaim 1s sheep not onl) kno-w which sheep are which. but the' can ttc<>SDitt which arc which in photo- paphs. Spoken ¥>nls travel around the earth at the speed of llght. but across the room at the speed of sound This. says an expttt. is wh) a radio annou.ncer in New York can be heard in London before he's heard at the other side oflhe ~studio rV! read that lbc fint dynasty of Ea>i>t ~fon: 3.000 B.C. was .. aliud) so c1v1b2cd it had deadly ~pons of metal. aovcmmcnt officills and taxes.·· . . ,, -. 8:30 9:30 .......... ....... ... ., .. ...... 0... ....,.,. -· Clllle .... ... ....... ....... ,.... ... .... ....... ... ,.,. .... ..... ..... Complete t....aon)lettnp In auncs.,-a TV Piiot. Follow the play on this hand from the recent Spfina North American Championships in Buffalo. Then decide for yourself whether anyone committed an error or whether ev- erythina proceeded normally. Onoe bis suit was raised, South's hand wu botdtltine foT a jump to pme. A trial bid in one of the point- ed suits micbt have been a wiser approach, and the final contract would have hinJed on whether • South chose t wo spades or three dia- monds as the game try. Against fow hearu, West led his fourth-best diamond. Declarer won in dummy and drew ttumps in two rounds with the ace and queen, then led a club. West played low and E.tit captured the jack with the kina. He shifted to the queen or spades, ducked by declarer wbo won the spade continuauon to lead a 1CC011d club. West rose with the aoe but, StDoe he was out of spades, the con- tract could not be ddeatcd. What's yow verdict? lt's not easy to spot, bat West could bave beala the laud. To do so, he bad to fly in the face of the old adqe: "Second band low." On the first club lead, West must 10 up with the ace and shift to tbe k:ina of spades. Declarer has no counter. No matter how be twists and tams, soooer or later East wiU pin the lead with either the kiJll or clubs or a spade, and the defenders can col- lect a total of four tricks in the black suns for a one-trick set. ---iti;f.--------- ACROSS 1 Roman jUdge 6 Sota • 10 MocMt 14 Und«ground WC>B• 15 Ms. Ferber 16 Oentah lengtti measure 17 Cosa Noslra 18 P8l1t a1ructUfe 20 ~ 21 Noetl · 1 son 23 Edgy 24 EYrtdey 28 Mwtced 28 Trident. 30 Main lmpeCt 31 Nm boriet 32 Anc::9t0f 36 T ...,._.. abbr 37 Squuh 38 Negattw 39Famed11nka 42 Lucifer 44 Foea of the koquCMI 45 Yams, •o 46 ~ 49~ 50 HeW1g wtr9 51 Coonskins 52 Nudelc acid 55 Cok>fado - errw.ice 51 Loceliam eo AJweys 81 Nk:M 82 Statements 63 Radlcela 64 R8r* 65 tnwsd DOWN , -8oYery 2 Clodl par1 3 Common ill 4 Gan.nd 5 ~ 8 Ae¥oft 7 Edenfte 8 Hoa1elry 9 Sh.wr 10 uoen.a 11 8.nk: tale 12 MMning 13 Expired 19 Attitude 22 Holds 25 HSldgun bullets: abbf 21,,..,.... 27 Aetl'Mts HF09m 2t Conllwe 30 Matke9 o-> 32 Celow 33 FOft>ld 3-4 Qamor 35 Sea birds 37 Purts1 40 Homestellderl 41 Wipes 42 s.nie 43 Mr Uncoln 4$ Summit 46 CaYOrt 4 7 y eltow'1JrMn 48 Str~ • 49 FelCOn 51 l ....ult 53 -bel'9 54 "It'• -- wortd1" st SuUI* 57Spn 59 Rec* .. .. byBllKNM _-r;:::: .. "Leaming to tell time is easy. It's four three one ..• four three two .. .four three three ... • llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson PEANUTS .. 11' TBS BLS~Da by Steve Moore ''°'°'IOO •n=:z-:---.,.... • • • ... -. • ,\J •• .. ,,,,., ... ... , DEIUflS THE llENAClt by Hank Ketcham WHO &JR!ES THE ~ AERE IN lHE FIRST Pl.ACE? by Charles M. Schulz IF YOU 6E61N STAR1N6 AT T~E BACK DOOR EARLY N THE MORNIN6, .. AMP '<OU STARE ALL DAV UNTIL SVPPERTIME .. IT MAKES FOR A LON6 DAV GARFIELD YOO KNOW, CSARF=1£LP, l VE OFTE.N. WONOERtP .•• TOllBLEWEEDS -r1Me 10 Ralew 'b.JR ~f"tJ'TY VONS .• WHICM ARE. SMARTER? CAT~? OR. 17065? x by Jim Davis HE'!> f'l5f-41NC:t OFF THE &ACK Of YOOR ROWING MAC.H INE. by Tom K. Ryan BLOOll COUNIY GAMIN AND PATCHES l co ')(JtJ CHA~ TO WA.~ oa;s? FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE -n.IE L.A~T 1lM€ I ~IED "ID CLIMB 1'Ht5 ROPE. I FE.J..l A"-lD BROK£ ~LEG!' by Addison . T~EY THOUGl-ff YOU t>tt> IT~ l.Ov't by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le DOux by Tom Batluk by Garry Trudeau Jh.t D t:i. J '=~=· SCC\\e1t.u~~-'-~<rs· ::: ----Mloo4'" CU.'f .. ------ •=..~lo:~ .... !w!!!,_....__ ~.,...--·.....,~ u•--..a.n-.......... --I ~· l G :y l I .'11 I J .I - ~--*..,. ,,. d ,..., .-i _.,.,.. lie _,,_ .. __ ----------------.... l """' "' 116TNN YOIJ •• ·/ ......... ___ ....... Ii ...._.,.__,,___.,.....-41 ! I ... --....... , .· Y•nkMe en•p Atha.tlca' winning atl'Mll .. I. Celtic•. Platone try, try 9981n In ca..... I. • W Orthy ,~ ~akerS, turn it again on M.~v INOLEWOOD (AP) -Jamn Worthy scored 28 points as the l.ot An,eles Lakers, badly btatcn twice in Dallas; ttonned back wi1h a 119·1.02 victory o'Ver the. Mavericks TUcSday niaht in the NBA Western Con· ferencc finafs. The victory pve the dcfcndin1 NBA champion l.akers a 3-2 ed&e in the b«t-of· seven series, with Game.6 scheduled Thurs- day night in Dallas. Lakers took control. Los Anaclcs move<S ahead to stiy with a 20-4 Korin' s~ in the first Quarter. rally ins from a J().4 dtfici& 31'1 minutes into the pmc to take a 24--14 lead with four minutes left in thcquancr. Dallas aot no closer than four points the rest of the way. The Lak~buih their lead to64-47 at halftime and were ahead 92-'11 heading into the final quarter. Ourina the decisive first haJf. the Lakers shot 66. 7 percent from the noor -induding 7-for-10 (or Worth) -while the Mavericks h11just 41. 7 percent of their shots. point$ in Dallas' Game 4' victory-had 19 in the fif\h pmc. Roy :f_,,.y added 18 for Dallas. The victory built on the Lakers' impressive home record in the playoffs. Tht'y have won ei&ht of nine at the f'-0rum this year and l 7 or their last 18 postsn.son games at home. 'The Mavericks have never won a playoff game in Inakwoi:>d. with the latest loss their ninth at the Forum. Los Angeles won the fim two games of the Western Conference showdown at the Forum, I I 3-98 and 123-10 I. But the Mavericks came back to win I 06-94 and I 18-104 at DalJas. Laken n. Dall•• ( ........ s.w.., Laller1 113, OaU.• " Laken 123, Della' 101 DeltH 106, IAk«~ H DaUas 111, Laken ICM TIM'MllV'S ken l.aken Hf, ·Oa1t111 102 ·'fl Thwscle'l's G..,,. Laken al ow,, 6 pm <L1kers ser!H, 3·2> • 5-•claY. Jwe • er SUftdilY, .IUM S M)chal Thompson of the Laker1 thiRU die smog helps_ althourh some say the Lakm were in a fog in !><Illas ... We're a lot mOft comfortable breathing at?""that wt can tee. ... Thompson said. . Both teams \it"wed Game Sas ptvotat t "This team has responded l~thc tml)Of1aal pmc~ all )ear." said Byron Scott of die Lakers. who has been handcuffed by the lead Ma' enck defense. Dallas al L•llen, 12:30 o.m. (if neceuarv> "I don't.know v.hat 1t i1 that makn us play our be-st in those situations Maybe it"1 al( t~ ve1crans "e ha,c. Ma)·bc it•s the extra pressure. rm not sure. But I think ever) one on this 1eam sense 11.-Scott said. The winner oflhc series will face the Eastern -Conference champion. eitfier ll<>ston or Detroit, for the NBA title. The Lakers. seeking to become the first team to win consecutive NBA titles since 1969. also-got 2C1~ •nd !-$.-points-from Magic Johnson points. and 21 points from Kareem Abdul-labbar. The seventh pmeofthc series. if necessary. "in be pla)ed Saturday afternoon at the f\)rum. - "No one has fiaured out wh) the Forum 1s so tough 'for us:· Dallas center James Donaldson center. ··we don't know 1f it's because the Lakcrs play that much better or if ~ -gu~~lK~kft'S~Hk~ some guy~. on ltlt team aren't in S) nc wnfi the much of team l~der Magic Johnson. rest of us. "He was pla)tnl the power forward spotand Wonhy. scoring with acrobatic moYes to the besket. had 18 points in the first half nthc Mark Aguirre led the Mavericks with 3 l points and Derck Harper -who had 35 The Mavencks have been pan of eight at guard. so. t~ were counting on him 10 pla)off games at the Forum smce J01n1ni the · -J league in t980and they are no" 0-9 (Pleue He LADR8/8S)J Warriors .roll into 2-AfinalS !3<>yd 's one-hitter provides shutout -Victory over Arroyo By XIRlt WOLC01T } Dllli!r ,... c.-t 1 IJ I .. , I EL MONTE·-Tiffany Boyd lost her bid for a no-hitter in the bottom of the seventh innin& Tuc$day, but it didn't really matter. She and the Woodbridae Warriors arc retumina for the second straight year to the CIF 2-A softball finals. Woodbridge (25-6) will meet Laguna . Hills. a 4--1 winner over Corona. at Mayfair Parle in Lakwood. Friday at 6 p.m .. m a rematch of last xcar's scoreless championship show- down. "A no-hitrcr. fine. A one-hitter, fine. It doesn't really matter. I'm just happy were goinJ to the cham- pionship apm." said Boyd. following her one-hrt. 1--0. win over Arroyo (22-l). The one-hitter was the third one Boyd (2j..4) has thrown in four playoff games this year. She has four shutouts in as many outings and ha$ yielded only eiaht hits in 28 inninp. (Pleue eee BOYD/BS) ..., .... ,....._ .... ._ Poaatato Valley 11tcJa frabm•n pltelaer Rae RlCe flre8 away. 1"lt 8t. Patil earned a 1-0 Yictory, pattlnf Barona (rilbt) doWii ID tile dampe Tuaday. St. Paul putsFV out, 1-0 Kropke surrenders just one base hit io Fountain Valley By ROGER CARLSON or .. ..., ....... CERRITOS -Fountain Valley H1&)l's girts softball team rode tht arm offrcshman Rae Rice and bat of -freshman catcher Shannon Dolan into the CIF 4-A semifinals. and lhett was an extra commodity of team defense which almost alwa)s kept them afloat. But after an exccpuonal defensive effort had kept the Barons in the hunt throu&h seven innings here at Hentagc Park aga1 nst Angelus League ~presentatJ ve St. Paul. there was ·no defense for Michelle M~no's sharp single to center. which scored M~ Lucas for a 1-0 St. Paul \'ICtof}. The decision sends St. Paul, behind Junior nght-hander Keri Kropkt . into the 4-~ finals Saturday niiht at 8 against to~Sttded Buena at Ma> fair Park in Lakewood K.ropke "as pafcct through seven inn1np and aflo~cd ool) one (Pleue .. BAll01'9/B3) Met rally-MeEnroe returning to his old form Angels puts. LA Spark is back fi1 more ways than one; fodder out,· S-4 Teenagersdominatewomen·sdoubles-~ So ---. 1.or x Dodgers bjow 4-2 PARIS CAP> -John McEnroe's old spark bn&htened a stormy Tues-} 0th-inning lead day at the f:'rench O~n and the -------=----' _ women's semifinal field was com- DOW 0-5 versus NY pleted with fo~r teen-agers in a day filled with rain and controversy. NEW YORK (AP) -Rook~ Kevin Elster got exactly what he ~xpccted, a two-out fastball from Alejandro Pena in the 11th inning. Elster promptly hit it into the left- field bullpen for his fourth home run of the season. giving the New Yon .Mets a S-4 victory over Los Angeles. their fif\h triumph in as many games against the Dodgers this season. ··As I walked up to the plate I was 1ookin& for a fastball on his very first I I I I Tb.~sclJedule AWAY Tonl9ht-New VOl'tl, 1:35 p.m. • June 2-fdle. HOfM McEnroe. the I 6th-seeded Amen- can in , the latest of a series of comeback attempts. argued abo~t weather cond11ions. slippery courts. darkness and line calls, and lit up a center court crowd as he battled even with defending men's champion Ivan Lendt before darkness called a halt to play. Meeting in Paris for the first time since Lendl came from two sets down to win his first Grand Slam cham- pionship over McEnroe four years ago. the two split the first two sets m tiebreakers -McEnroe taking the first. Lendl the second. &th tiebrcaks were 7-3. ··Maybe we should get balls that glow in the dark. so we can sec them better," McEnroe shouted threu&h the &loamin' at umpire Richard Kaufinann as he broke Lcndl's serve to pull to 4-2 in the third set. Referee Jacques Dorfmann then stepped in and called off play. The match was to be resumed today. Beating the darkness was Andrei Chcsnokov. the men's 14th seed from the Soviet Union. who eliminated fourth-seeded Pat Cash. the' Wimbledon champion from Austral- June l-Clnclnn•tl, 7:35 p,m. June .-Clnclnn.tl, 12:20 p,m. / June 5-Clnclnn.ll, 1:05 P.m. June ~on. 7:35 p.m. June 7-Houslon. 7:35 p.tn. June t-Hou.tton, 7:35 P m. .-ia. 2·.6. 6-2. ~. 6-3. m a match that ended just before the McEnroe-Lendt • On TV, Ctlennel l1 • ./ On TV, Ctlennel • • Alloemeaon KA8C, 790 match was suspended. Cash said his match never should have finished. Intermittent rain apin created scheduling problems. with two men's quarterfinals -Mats Wilandcr of S"'eden versus Emilio SanchC'Z of Spain and American Andre Agassi versus Guillermo Perez Roldan of Argentina in a battle of 18-ycar-olds -postponed one da). But the women's field completed its semifinal draw, with IS-year-olds Gabriela Sabatini and Nicole ProviS. and 17-year-old Natalia Zvercva joining 18-)ear-old defending cham- pion Steffi Grafin the final four. The fourth-Sttded Sabatini. who meets Graf in the semifinals sched- uled for Thursday, beat Helen Kclesi of Canada 4-6. 6-1. 6-3. 1n the completion of a suspended match from Monday. The contest ended with Kclesi complain mg she had been cheated over a hne call that gave the Argentine match point. "Maybe they wanted to stt Graf- Sabauni in the semifinals. not Graf- Kelcsi." the 18-yrar-old Canadian said. Zvcrtva. the 13th Sttd from the Soviet Union who eliminated t~ ti.me champion Martina Navratilova on Sunday. beat sixth-seeded Helena Sukova. 23. of Czechoslovakia 6-2. 6-3 and t>Ccamc the fist Soviet women's semifinalist in the open since Olp Morozova m 1975. .,,~ John Mc&moe and I.an Lendl were ID a tooth and n.a1l matcb 1"1~ before daJ'kDeu baited plaJ. Tiley con- tlnaed oa today at tbe l"rench open ID Parla. ~i;*·~~!!~~~~1~i To cat oraottocat jud:a-e to .decide dc~ns1ve rep(accment 1n the etpth l . I . , 9 ·1 --rinn ... . ..._ '--• ., · ~ "I told myselfto1wina for 1 home . ....._TMAaedat.s Pren · · nan. and you saw what happened -1 · . claims catamarans att ilkpl unoo the Ottd o ; catatn&ran .should he lose the urt cale. aot it. Davey (Mets mu.aeer ~vey New ~land'• America's Cup chaUc1t9Cr Gift. a document outlinina the basic rules of .. We dadn't put a team 1 a boau*ther and Johnt0n) had told me an the n1nth yacht bas hute or no chance 1111nst a auamaran. America's Cup competitioL He said \M dcftndtt come here n0t to saal for the ~mmc.·s C'up," he innins that I .-as eoint 10 win 1he ·~. tJ:at Kiwif enthusiasm for . •he rKt. would must meet him in ,a lite and 'imitar bolt. said. ''On the other hand. J can't think or a more pmt. \ d1m1rush considerably 1hou1d 1 J~ decide the Tht San Oiqo Yacht dub and i\S dcftn~ unfortunate l)ttttdtnttoxt for the Cup than to ttt . ••n11 is the fin& time I have ever San Dicao Yacht Club can use the multit\ull. maNFf.SailAmcrica,claim the)'canuse1n1boat a m"t.ihull and a monohull racc. C\ ·n ~f the jud won an ut,.innirc_ pmc with a ··1 tlai.nk the f~t• of life are that aiaimaraas dni&ncd within ~irf kftath restrictions 1n \be ••to make that dcdsion.- home Nft '°''-all tM way bid to ht.at monof\ulb, •• New Zealand Challnee (hair-dttd which IMUl no menuon of the """'bef of ,,..,, Zealaod ,.,. SD wacen . Litde ~. I m ,ettint more coafi-man Michld Fay said Tuelday. shonty befOtt his hults. • data c8cfa pmc. Dolt 't ~ l 12~fo0t·'°"t moftOhullecl.aloop.made hilirst U.S. A ClllrMrla never been utcd n tht haftlt'~ all the DitcMn ,et. prllcta n1n 1n watm off San Dieeo. . year hisaory of tk Amma's Olp. Secolid batman 'Wdy·lletman. "nis 11 si.,_ not doubks. Two teanas "'We considttcd • catamann eart on ... fay '•hO loM h.is .aani,.,job:ia' ·,. pll~wiUbeatonete.nnisplayct.lthintit)abc>ut said ... We didn't daalle,.e (ia a caulMt'U) ..,..., .. but ha bRt. pie • as iiMa* 11 \halo" •id Fa)'. who is conlali111 lbc btta1nt our opiaioft..., !Mt• catam1nn was MM beawTimT•frtil•llle ~dllb·,.,...1b"ddtadiMa.pwntlaeo:loot contemplatedunckf1heC>mlofOiftand~y lill. lrOY-e in tlHoee NM Aw the Miia. ca•....,. in a Stptcmbtt "IJMUI Oft'San °"'°-Wiil 9* disible to •it vftdcf ttlc Deed of Gift. .. n.a•sas~a..-earw,.. Tlletwosidta&tft,lttlltdOnl1rpmat101tM "A cata...,.n Md M~ sailed tn the 1e111 ..._ pllf ... Jaia• llkl ~ GSfTl'DA illuc May ,2$ i• tht "* ~ t\tna'ka'sOtpudwiectidn'ucen11thcrithtt}~ ... WW.,....., -............ Cwt or New.)'.-. which l\at j.-lfdktiow °"' ot boll i• nybody's c,a '°' an mcnca'a Oap caNtf, .... times lie WI ...... ~·· c.; disputes. Tiae c:wn Mi"°'~ maacta. Wediclft).W..ttot!Wda.eudMdidft't ~••he ............ IMl'1.. ..... ill Nii• wnt l0 911 OllC. We •ii don't'.'W8n1to1111 ont. .. aay... A ftlili1 uirt NeW ·Zealand banker. Fay dcdi~ &0111y *tk'r he would race the I 0 8th-inning rally fails to put stops !o Boston· s wagon M1kr Smithson waited to \.\1n a game \I.Ith Boston for 12 )C'ars So he d1dn·t mind ha' mg to wait t\l.O more mnmg,s Smuhson shut out (ahfom1a on fi,e hits through ~ven 1nn1n1s Tues- day n1ghL thrn fidgeted as rC'hever ltt Smnh gave a\l,a~ most ofh1s lead beforr the Red So\ held on to beat the Angels 4-J "It feels real good I ne,er thought · The schedule HOME 1' odav-left '· AWAY Ju~ ?-Milwaull.e' S.35 o.m • JUf'le J-M1twauli.ee, 5..35 e>m • June ~lw•Ukee. 6-0S e>.m • June s--Mil'W•ut.ee. l1 JS 1 m • June 6-Texu, 535 pm J~ 7-TnH, 5;35 om.• June I-Texas. 5.35 Pm. • •·On TV <:Mnnel S • Al games ()fl KMPC, 7l0 ... ~· ., .· .. .. .. .. Quote of the day Tom ~elly, low-key mani,u oflhe Minne· SOia Twins. after Les Straker pve up four runs in one-third of an inning in a 14-1 loss to Kansas City: "He JUSt didn't seem hke he was into the pmc. Maybe his b16rhythms ..-ere off." Spinks'careerjeopardized? TRUMBULL. Conn. -Former hea~ywci$)lt champion Leon Spinks will not find 1t easy fightina in Connecticut ~in, or maybe anywhere else. Spinks was knocked out 33 seconds into his fisJtt wnh C.inad1an Tony Momson Monday n1iflt, which had the 1mm«11ate effect of a 30-day suspension. But John Bums. head of the Connecucut Athletic Comm1ss1on. on Tucsda) said once the sU$ptns1on expires. Spinks"w11l have to pass a physical exam before fighting in the state again. Bums said 1t wasn't the state commission's job to end Spanks' career ... but I would take a good cl~ look at him if he was JOmg 10 fiJht again m Connecticut." He said boxing comm1ss1ons an other states would be notified of Connecticut's action Spmks. 34. wttknockcd ofTh1s feel by Momson. a last-second replacement from S)dney, Nova Sco11a. with a barrage of three punches. after a nght to the head had stunned the former champion. Spanks beat the count. but referee Matt Mullane) stopped lhe bout "I couldn't let h1m!o on." said Mullaney. "That gu) would have knocke him dead." Manin Haupt. Spinks' manager, had bngcd pnor to the fig.ht that his boxer would easily handle his opponent and be out of the st.ate qu1clcJy. After the fiJht, Haupt first tned to explain the defeat. by saying, "He JUSt got caught with a shot that would have knocked out Mike Tyson ... Spanks' brother. Michael. will #tfht Tyson, the undisputed world hca,ywe1ght champion. June 27 in Atlantic City. N J Trail Blazers being sold out PORTLAND. Ore. -Larr)'. m Weinberg, owner of the Portland Trail Blazers. announced Tuesday that he 1s selling the team to Paul Allen of Suttle. The agreement will be finalized when It is appro ... cd by the National Basketball Assoc1at1on Allen. who dcscnbes himself as a basketball fanatic. is president and chief executive officer of As}mctnx Corp.. a personal computer software comp3ny based in Bellevue. Wash Wemberi was one of the three onginal mvcston who brou&ht 1he first ma1or league franchise to Ponland iogelher with Herman Sarkowsky of Seattle and the late Bob Schmertz of New Jersey. he founded the Trail Blazers in 1970. WeanbftJ and Sartowsk} tater pul'rltaSed - Schmertz's mtettSt when Schmem bought the Boston Celtics Weinberg became maJOfll) owner and ~·­dent of the team 1n 1975 aOer bu>in& Sarkowsky's interest v.hen Sarkowsk.)' became mana11n1 partner of the Seattle Sea hawks of the National Football Leque. Raiders, Taylor come to term• LOS ANGELES -Malcolm Taylor. [il defensive end and i.acklc. signed a four-•II• year. Sl.27 million contnct wnh the Los A~&elcs Raiders on Tuesday. his agent said. The 28-year-old Taylor entered tht NFL as i fif\h- round draO choice with the Houston Oilers. The 6- foot·S112. 285-poundef was pe.id $90.000 la5t )'etr. • 'Bama:, spc>rts agent settle ATLANTA (AP)-The University of m Alabama and spons a nt Norby Walters have r~ched a scnlem~t that Wiii iead to dismissal of criminal chargt:S against Walters. who s1aned contracts with two Alabama basketbaJI players before their eha.ibtlity eJ.pired, accord1n& to published reports. Walters had faced misdemeanor charges of tampenng with a spons event, commercial bnbery and deccpuve trade practices because he had signed contracts with Derrick McKey aod Terry Coner while they were still playing basketball for Alabama. The Atlanta Constttutton reported in Wednesday's editions that the universny had reached a $200,000 settlement with Walters and was to receive the first $50,000 payment on Wednesday. As part of the settlement, the newspaper said. Walters transm1neda signed consent decree Tuesday in which he agreed never to conc'Cal any dealings with an eligible student-athlete from the Southeastern Con- ference. Devers, Guidry poised, ready EUGENE. Ore. -Muh1-talent«I m Gail Devers of UCLA and Carlctte Guidry ofT exascould s•eal the show as their teams battle for the women's title 1n the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Champ1onsh1ps. The performances by Devers and Guidry dunng the fourth-day meet. which begins Wednesda) at the Uni"ersll) of Oregon's Ha~rd Field. should over- shadow th~ men's compemion in which UCLA 1s a proh1b1uve fa"ontc for a seconchtra1ght utle. Dc'crs. a senior. and Guidry. a freshman . a~ entered in fi ve events each. Devers. 21 . will compete in the IOO-meter dash. I 00-meter high hurdles. lonuump. 400-meter relay and 1,600-meter relay. · Guidry. 19. will compete in the I 00. long Jump. both relays and the 200.meter dash. Devers. called the "Bionic Woman" by UCLA woman's coach Bob Kersec. has competed in as many as SC\. en events in one meet. Padres expected to take Benes NEW YORK-And~ Bcnes.aP.!tcher Ill from the University of Evansville, is expected to ~ taken by the San Diego Padres as the top pick an bascball'samateur draft today. Benes. a 6-foot-5 naht·hander. was 16-3 with a 1.42 ca.med-run avera~ for the Aces. leading his team to the NCAA tournament. Benes struck out 187 and walked 36 in 146 inning. G~ Olson. a 6-foot-4 nght-handed reliever from Auburn. 1s another poss1b11ity as the No. I pick. He was 7.3 with 10 saves th is season and 113 strikeouts in 72 inn in as. Television, radio TELEVISION .... 4 30 p.m -PRO BA.SEBA.LL: Dodacrs at New York Mets. Channel I J, WOR. S'.05 p.m -PRO BA.R.ETBAU..: NBA ,_Eastern.Conference finaJs Game 5 -Detroit at Boston. TBS. 6 p.m. -BOXING: From Atlantic: City. N.J . ESPN 7· 30 p m -BOXING: Azumah Nelson vs. Mano Man1nez 1n a 12-round super-father· wc1aht bout, from lnaJewood (taped), Prime Ticket. RADIO 4.30 p.m. -PRO BASEBAU.: Dodatl'\ at New York Mets. KABC(790). 4:30 p.m. -PRO ISAS£BALL: Padm at Philadelphia. KFMB (760). TBORSDA Y'S TELEVlSION 6 a.m. -TENNIS· French Open women's semifinal matches, from Paris (five hours, delayed). ESPN 3 1 642-432'1 Neil Alkn pitched thl'tt"hn ball over oine lnninlf after takina over for New York stancr Al Ltitcr, who threw only one pnch, and the Yankees snapped Oakland's 1ix-pmc winnin1_ streak by ..bcatina the Athletics S-0 Tuesday ni&ht in Olk.land. Allen. 2-0. relieved Ltiter after Carney Lansford lined a ball offthc rookie left-hander's pitchina arm for an infield sin~e. Leiter ~nt to a h~pital for X~ys. which were ntptl\'e. .. Allen, under ~ball rules. MS credited with a shutout because he entered tbc pme before an out was recorded. His last shutout was July 20. 1986, while with the Chicago White Sox apinJt the Yankees. Allen. the n&tn-handcd relie\'er who fonncdy was a starter. retired die flrst 19 hinters tie faced before Jose Cansc~o bounced a sina)e up the middle with one out in ,. the se"enth. Ron Hasse) singled in the eighth. Allen struck out five and walked none. Elsewhere in the American Leaaue: Twin I, Rusen I; In Minneapolis, Dan Gladden went 4-for-5 with thrtt doubles anCi Greg Gaane h.it a two-• ron homer as the Minnesota Twins beat the Texas Rangers. • WllJle Sox It, Ttaen l: In Dell'Oit, Gary Redus hit a grand slam and Ivan Calderon and ~on Karkovice also homered. powering the Chicago White Sox over the Detroit Tigers. ··-• -The White Sox. who had scortd just 28 runs in their ~rev1ous 13 ~mes. won (or the third time in 14 games: Detroit lost Its fourth straight. hs lonaeit skid of the season. Royal• I, hadJus S: In Cleveland, 8111 Buckner 'fiit a sacnfi~ fly and Scott Mad1sol\ and Jamie Quirk folllowed with run-sconna singles in the IOlh innina. leadina lhe Kansas City Royals over the Cleveland Indians. Blee Jays t, Brewen t: (n Toronto, Dave. Stieb pitched a one-hitter, allov.'\ng a fourth-innU\g single to B.J. SurhofT. and. the Toronto Blue Jays routed the Milwauktt Brewers. Stieb. 7-3. retired the final 17 batters and won h1~ sixth straight dec1S1on. He is 6-0 Wlth a 2.34 ERA 1n May He walked none and struck out five in his first ca~r one- hittcr Orlolea 1!, Marinen $: In Seattle. c.:al Ripken. Fred Lynn and Rene Gonzales homered in the seventh innma and the Baltimore Orioles got a season-high 16 hitJ and beat the Seattle Mariners * Twin' I, R•ft!Mn 6 T'IJIAS MMIOOTA E..,. .. ,_ .. Siwf• r1 w~• oet' .... It Mc0wt4Cf MSt-c ......... ( ---•• ft,. •rlllll ••llW SO 1 t ~· SI 4t St JI UOlllr*. •tt I SJlJ _... 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In the National Lcque; c.IM 4, R.Mt t: JefTPlco pitched a four-hit shutout in his major leaaue debut and Andre Dawson homered as the ChLeaao Cubs beat the slumpina Cincinnati Reds. . Pk<>, a 22-ycar-old right-hander brouiflt up from lov.a whert he had a S-2 record to help the injury-nddJcd CubP-itchinastafT. didn't wal~a batter and struck out six. lsran1 U , Plratcs l: rn Atlanta, rookie Tom Gia vine allowed four hits in e1iflt inninas. Dion James. Bru~ Benedict and Gerald Perry had two-run smiles and Ron Gant homered as the Atlanta Braves ~at the Pittsburah Pirates. Qlutt t, Expos t: In Montreal. Robby Thomspon capped a four·run sixth inning with a three-run homer. bis first o( the season. and Rick Reuschel pitched seven innings for his seventh victory as the San Francisco Giants broke a four-game losing streak by defeatina the Montreal Expos. Padres 8,PkUUca 0: In Philadelphia. Andy Hawkins pitched a four-hiller and Marvell Wynne had four hiu. three of which stancd scoring innings. as the San Diego Padres beat Ph1ladelph1a. snapping the Phillies' four- game winnina streak. CardJub t, Asttot 7: Jn Houston. Oa1e Smith hit his first home run since the 1985 National Leque pla)'ofTs. a three-run shot that hi&hhghted a five-run founh inmna. and the St. Louis Cardinals held on to defeat the Houston Astros. * Bnws 11, fltratn 1 ~ An.ANT& .,... . ..... J... •-ct ',' J 4 111 <*ertllllll ,,,, 4111 G,..,,.,._ StJ> t I II DMrllfl¥ rt 4 I > I 4 t t 0,,.,_ ~ J I I 1 J • • Tllernet " • • •• J., ......... 11 J >•• Gelll1b 4)J I ... --211 0100 11 1 ~· , "' I t I A.-.dW• I It I ••• 1 •• 0 •• ••• tt I 4 T-J1 II 17 ti ._...., ...... ------1 ·-,. .... _,, c.-"'-••• -o~ m E~ ... ~t-... ) ....... ta J L0.-••1--. 4, alleflle 4 79-Vle•tne A~. 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Lan.... .. • • • • l)Mr!fti Cf 4 ••• ,... ,. • • • • ,.._, • 4 ••• ~· JI t I Oe.-'1 4 I I I IOt~f'I l I I I ~t211 4 f I I OHell It J I I I Gren Ill J 1 t t , ....... ct J • t • JOe"'te J ••• aowu c J • t t '-"•a a " 1 ,,_,,,. ) • • • °"""°".. ) • J 1 .... . . . . .... ' ... S.• t ••• ...,_. . ... ~,. "'' r.-Jtt41 T .... '--.., ...... ~ .. ....... a.. ...... ... ~ w-.... •e;-o.--m ~ t LOI-<~ J C'*-a ~. Grtc't. °"'"""" ~...;:.-o.-1111 '9-0MM .. . " ....... 4M I 4 4 t t tJ •• f •• N I I a t l • . ·~· . ' .._,,._. ' I I I ~ .. --. ..,,...,, Ftnt 5«-.. _ Tlwtl 1(-.c r -1J1 a-1>m * ,..,. Blue J•vs '· Brewen o MILWAl.Mll. TOllOWTO ...... ., .... _,., J11 J 0 I I ,.,_ tt S I I J • .... >II I I ti ""-lit It t I ~< JO it -ct tlt l .,._. Cf J t I I L_,. W I I 0 0 S<fw°"'C 0 I It _,.. ) I It ~ llt ) I I I 0.... 4 I) I .,,..,.,, .. . 0.. C-ct •••• 0-• l I t I McGnll It I II 0 9'-'1 JO ti ~-4 tt I A-.cf.. ) 0 0 t Mitt< 4 1 1 I $-U t 0 I I ..,_'1 4 1 1 I JC.M l• u ' I I t I Lit-2ll 4 I I I Gei'W 211 JI It T-•I I I T.-tit 911 1 _....., ....... --------T....... •• W.-t c.--....... -WMlt Cit I~, "-"-Ol'-#llw_.. I LC>e-Mlw-.. I, T...-S ,.......,_, ~ S' , ... .. • " ..... '° I t ·J 1 t S ' 1 •1-J J J 1 I J t I I t I Flyers get new coach PHlU..OELPHIA (AP) -Paul \krtmarcn. a vet- er:m o( the Ayers' ~Broad Street Bui hes." will be- come the next roach for Philadelphia. a source close to the club said Tuesday. The Ayers will make the announcement dunna a noon news confettnce today. General Manaacr Bob Clarke hl5 a.aid Holmsttn. 32. now an asJistant coach for the team. or John Pld· dock. 33. coach of the club's championship Hershey aml;.le in the American Hockey Laaue, would replace Mlkt Keenan. who ,..., fired M!)' 1 I. Junior prefers elsewhere • . • ·LAKER& ••• h9m81 ttbound and run lhe fat brlU. ii a little liludl IO at.~ he 18id Ott lonatime fiicncl. nt Mavtrku• Omit tluplr - _in an apparent slump durina lhl .. ::.Jwo •ma of the series •*' -. :)c*Vily crilidi.ed. : But Ill &Mt ftded in Dllll&. _ = ••WJlle Dwell ittm:Pef .. " ~inu.. it'• Mc boAus Polnll t. :&Mm." Uller, foKh Pal Riley •id. = And WU it I slump? = ••Before you uy Derek was in 1 ~UMP. lea's catqorize that," Black· =-an..ecs. : .. Dem& wasn't tceri~ I lot, WI =a.e·a not suoDoeed to. SO what if he =--a-i matins bl1 lbots? He ... ttiD ~tint the a.n to me and Matt and .., ib)'landMWCft~ ;;,.. MHC wu still olayina ddeMe. • .I • :;re wu still makin1 smai't plays. • : .. T hat's the <titference bttwun us :and t~ l.akers: we may not be u • le...ed. but we do know how to pley : our roln. .. he said. . • I . : Los Anecks' Kurt Rambis ex- : pfained what he thou&ht went wrona : an Dallas. · 7.. "We're not doina two of the ,fundamental things. We're not tet· 'lina to the man. allowina open shOts. .. and we're not positioned to rebound. •• "Whclhu or not that's due to . fatiituc. I don't know." Riley had this to say: "They're playing almost a box-and-one on · Byron !Ind takina him out of the ' pme. Rolando is doing a areat job. chasina and trailina him throuO\ every pick. "Byron should be flattered that ~ they're payina more attention to him · than anyone else. but we'vegottofind ·a way to shake him loose..:' Now it's back to Dallas and the Mavericks' home "advantage." If Dallas is succes5ful in Game 6 all the Mavericks have to do is fiaurc out how they can tum 0-9 at the Forum around. ·Home advantage : lost iii th·e ShUffle Celtics. Pistons resume 2-2 series :-tonight in Boston BOSTON (AP) -It's no surpnse the Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics are tied at l. What is surpns-- in& is how it aot that way. The Pistons took a 2-1 lead in the -• bcst-of-sev~n Eastern Confettnce · finals thanks to a victory in the series opener when they snapped a 21-pmc losina streak at Soston Garden. The Celtics, by holdina Detroit to 10 points in both the fint and fourth quarters. broke a nine-same losina streak at the Pontiac Silveroome ·· Monday with a 79-78 vietory. It was the first time since 1956 that a team won a playoff aame with fewer than 80 points. Game Swill be at Boston Garden tonight. wtlh neither team ~ confi- dent about winnin1 at home as it was before the series. A year aao. Boston won in seven pmes, with the home team winnina each time. "The homccourt advanta&C isn't &<>ina to win 1t for us," Celtics auard °'nny Ainae said. "They beat us at home and we beat them at the Silverdome. •• .. It's 2-2 and both teams arc capeble of bealil!J each other on their bome- court," .Pistons auard Jsiah Thomas said. "It's a matter of who's playin,a the ~tthat niaht. In order to make 1t • to the finals. you not only have to be &ood, you've JOt to have a little luck also. Riabt now. luck hasn't been on our side. ... . . . . . .. . "There's a lot ofbasketball left to be played 'b~ both team'-" ... .. . . , ... -we know ~ can play with them. win apinst them," Detroit's Vinnie Johnson said ... We're just aoina to have to ao up there and steal another pme.·· On Monday. the Celtics conunued an a ~rics-lona shootina slump. bot their drouaht has never reached the proportions that Detroit's did in Game '4. • Boston shot 40 percent from the field. with only Robert Pansh man- aging to hit half of his shots. The much-malianed Celtics . bench. Qutscored 128-36 1n the smes. had one p0int. But the Pistons were 2(>.for-78 from the field. 33.3 percent. Their percent~ aot that h1&h onry becau~ center 8111 Laimbcer had an outstanding day. scoring 29 points on I ~for-IS shootina. Other than Laimbcer. Detroit was l(>.for-63. or 2S.4 percent Joe Dumars was I-for-I 0. Ad nan Dantlcy 2-for-9 and Thomas (>. for-20. A review of the videotape Tuesday revealed that the Pistons missed 20 consecutive shots in a 10: 11 span of the first half. •. At the half I WIS ecstatic, .. Pistons coach Chuck Daly said ... We were only 10 down after m1ssm1 21 straight. They should have been up 2S." ·' "Offensively, I think we were playing not to lose instead of playina to win," Thomas said. "It was a game where neither team played well. I don't think either team deserved to win.'' Johnson, who was 1-for-S for the Pistons. •arced with Thomas' assessment. ... · .. ·,., Cw .. .., ..... ....., ...... .., •• , ..... . .. .. I • ........... ~.._,..._,,,. ...... ••4• .... . ......... . ··~ ............ ", .. .......................... ., .... ..... 11.rr•r -.,.., ••••11. ••••• • ... nths.,, ~ ............. -"''• .. - .... . 19M1 ",_.. a'YlfAl l' C...A • Mlll&T9 --~ M l l B I l lLl'llM ,.._,. _,.,... 90C*I ....... ~ ITAT...-V W ' IM8Y _.,. ~ .-.-,.. WMl1't ....... W00DCJt 1'0'l'I ""~ ~NeMCJCM llUCM *- 1HE GREY GOOsE -INcaD'OllATID .. • loob OD ln Tueedaf'a PfBA playoff &a.me. Lakera won to take 3-2 ..nee lead. HUUn SAU ENDS JUNl4 19Ut HUllYIN FOR HUNDREDS Of DIALS IN OUR . SUMMEI TIAVR CllCULAIU PRICES GOOD THIU JUNE 4TH. MOST S10US OfllH LAn MC*.-SAT. 'Tll lO '.M. SUN. 'Tll 7 '.M. · OPIN MIMOllAl MT 9 A.M.-6 '.M. ' ~ stnkina ou1 Sl b9t1tt1. • Boyd, ~ 1t11ior. wanttd nothma more th ii) t'lr than an opponunjt)' to pin sole possn1on of the CIF l·A C'town for Woodbr~et. the Pacific Coast Uai~champ1on.aftersharina h witb Laauna Hill• a year l&O· "It dotsn't really matter who v.e J)i~)-. Jjust Wlnl 10.Jel bmck int~ ai\CI throw under the liahts," Bo)d. the PCL'• Most Valuable ptaycr said o( Friday'• championsJup pme ... , t"s bttn a Iona )'tar. I said last year that I would have rather lost than tied (in lhc final). and I stilt feel lhat-way." While Bo)d .. cnt to won. on the moU'nd. :f UHday. strikina out 16 of the 22 battm she fattd. Woodbndac picked ue the onJ> run it ~ with· lbe ~t o( a quntionable call. . In the top of the sixth and both teams hitltU. Woodbridge center fielder Mary Ouprd sent the first pitch of the inning bouncin31~wn the Jhird bast 11 °' arul .KCO{ . lO tM plate un:apirt. O\ er thud baw or a hit. This call caused crcat displeasure on the pan offirst-~ear Anoyo Coath Mike Klein. >Aho stormed the field in protest. and the Arroyo pla)ers and fans. -.ho Je~red t~ umpire for his dcc1s1on But the pli) stood .. ..as did Duprd. safe at second with a double . Duprd. a li ~t-tcam PC'L ~lcct1on this !Cason. ad\':anccd to third on a pas~ ball and scored the pme- winnina run one pitch later v.hen shortstop Lisa Wchran.!ofted a sacri- fice 0) to center field. ··t hate to see a pme end on what I think was a bad call." Klein said after his team. the Empire Lcq~ cham- pions. lost for the first ume lhis season . ..The ball bounced '""tee inside the chalk line. but 1t didn't go . over the bag hke the ump said. ··1 hate to sec a whole season come down to a call that's questionable," he said. "It's not fair to the ktds ·· Neither was Bo)d. Using her nsins fast ball. the hkcs of which ArTO)O had ne"er Sttn • . 4 bucrunner in itic ...-. -• linale so caater b)' Se.-k t•· S"IW)u. ibowt'vn-. _.. ..... • • double pla) and K~ ..... .. fourth stra1Jh.t shwou1 i• .,._ ...._ off~ b>· farina just 24 bancn bi lie eight framC$. • . .. .. She's an outstandiM .-... said Founwn Valtn'. Ctiildt Qll7 Baker. "'bo saw his Sunltt t:a.il champions JO out at 24-7·1.t"We pla)ed sood defense and'°' ou1 ala couple of inninas. but we were tryiM to swina too hard." • Kropkc "ruck out I 0 and was in command tbrouahout. Sa~1 bale bit WIS the only ball hit OUI 61 • infield. . SL Paul, meanwbilt, wun't a.e-. fooled a,y Rice. altho~ die S>Aordsmen had lroubk appfyint lht, knockout punch. St. Paul wasted a runner at le'COnd in the lhird: nad the bases loeded with cme out in the fifth~ and ltft a runner~ at third in tncsiith WMfi ifie S"'ordsmen decided to P'ina away >A 1th the infield drawn in and a runocr stashed at third ""ith just oac out. ·· The decision to swina away W.s obv 1ousl)' ma& with the thol,&Jht tut 11 "'as Kropke .. ho was at the~ The same Kropke who eliminaed Fountain \>alle) in the fim round;of the pla)ofTs a year ago with shvtaut p1tch1ng and a home run in a 1-0 ' icto~. i It bKkfired into a pop-upaod Rtce got t~ last batter on a tapper to thi;d. but t>AO anninss later St: Paul put togrther the -.:inner. • Lucas. who was 3 for 3. led off f,e bottom of the eighth with an infi.id rap o "er the l«Ond bate baa and~ ad"anccd to second on a ucrifice by Nancy Sanchez Sanchez was safe when the Barons tned to get Lucas. It appeared as Jbou&Ji ttie Barons would escape apt n w hcrt ·Tana Wey taaed the runner and completed a doulile pla)» Lucas advancina to t1'11rd. PINNZOIL MO'IOR.OIL • """' 12 .--. • ~ 'fOA!I oil --d-~~ ..... wit #oWlf OI. .. .... 54! ::-.-.,.. s_ .... -· =-.::1°"1" -__ .. i. - .. • --.. """ .. .... =~--Q-· • -· =-.. 64! GREAT BUYS ~--- ·' I DM1D ft.009 MAT llT lOeQUI W91ot :s:c: 14" . :~ ........... "' .~ -:..:.-. .. Jfajor League standings Amenca11~e ... . WDT DIVISION " L ·Ptt. GB Lit Streal R....e Awa~ Oakland .. lS IS .700 6-.f Lost I 16-8 19~ MinnHOta 2S 23 .S21 9 9-1 ·Won I IS-II 10-12 Texas 2S 24 .SIO 9'h 4'..(; U>st I IS-12 10-12 t Kansas Caty 23 27 .460' 12 ~7 Won I 10-IS 13•12 t Cbicqo 2l 27 .438 13 3-7 Won I 11·1 s 10. l 2 1 Seanle 22 29 .431 131/2 4-6 Lost I 11-13 11·16 I· .u,e11 19 32 373 16112 2-8 Lost 3 8-17 11·1 s I £AST DIVISION • ' 16-8 New York 33 16 .673 8-2 Won 17-8 '· Clc\·e1-nd 31 19 .620 . 21h 7.3 Lost I IS-9 16-10 f Detroit' 28 20 .S83 4'1J S-5 Lost .. 12-10 16-10 Boston 2S 22 .S32 7 5-S Won 2 14-12 11·10 Milwaukee 26 24 .S20 1'h 6-4 Lost I IS-II 11-13 Toronto ·-'22 29 .431 12 4-6 Won I · 10-14 12-IS Bahimo~ II 39 .220 221/2 S-S Won I 7-16 4-23 Tfflday'1 Scores Boston 4. Aar•• s ~nsas City • Oeveland 3 ( 10 innings) .uMmcAlll L8MUm ...... 4, ..... 1 , .. , .... • I •• •• J ' ) •• 0 ,) l l 0 4 1 I 0 • 0 1 ' ,. .. J 1 to 2 0 I I CM FHfl' .. , ... ScNllll• ) 1 I 0 • ...-... '. 0 0 1teva J 1 1 o Jovfllr 1• f I Jl Ow!Wle., • 0 ' , coevra rt , 0 0 0 ......... ,00, ......-0.lf ••10 ArmMd )010 cwear 9fl o o 1 1 M/IWC ) 0 1 0 .. ,,.,.... ,.,,, sc...-. ....... ..... .... -·-· ~ ----· GetM WIMlnt lt81 -NoM. &-SC>wen. DP-Cellfornle J, l.08-4ollon •• Caltfomle • 19-0wl!veM. Dowlllnt. 8«11· lnelt, 8wrett. S--SC>w9'\, CDevlt, Miiier. SF-SOWen, Howtl P M RD .. SO ...... 7 5000, .. -Ori~O Io. Dcu'Oir I SnlllMOft W, I• I Umlttl ~ 2 ? l 2 I 0 ... • t r • ' ... I• .. Toronto 9. Milwaukee 0 Minncsota8, Texas 6 Ball1morc 12. Seattle S New York S, Oakland 0 Today's Games New York (Hudson 4-1) at Oakland (C Young 4-2). 12.1 S p.m. Balt1more (Ballard l-1) at Seattle (Bankhead 0-2). I :JS p.m. Kansas City (Bannister 6-4) at Cleveland (Bailes 4-4). 4:35 p.m . Chi~o (81ttiFO-I) at Detroit (Moms 4-6). 4'.JS p.m. Milwaukee (Birkbcck 2-4) al Toronto (Flanagan 4-3). 4:3S p.m . Texas (Guzman S-3) at Minnesota (Viola 8-1 ). S:OS p.m. Only pmcs scheduled Tlaanday's Games Aqels at Milwaukee. S:JS p.m Toronto at Boston, 4:35 p.m. Texas at Chicago. S:30 p.m. Seattle at Karrsas City, S:3S p.m . Onl)' games scheduled Natlonal League WESf DIVISION w L Pct. GB Llt Streak Frew L ... 4 •2·J • • • S 3 ·~ 2 10003 CorNft 1·> 0 I 0 0 I HIP-SCllOlleld (bV $mllhson). WP-FrHer. UmpltH llome, Jovce, Flnt, Ci.rk, SK· ond, Morrison, Third, vott...io. T-2:51. A-2•,00S NATIONAL Ll"AGU• Metl $, Dldtll I 4 t..OS ANO•&.U N•W YCNtlt S.1111> HftO r1 Oroscoo Mlrll'll llh JHowellp APetllo GlbloftW Guetrtrlb Hemlll\lb snevct Stul>C)$ ltl Sclotde c Andesnt.S MIOevs oft Shronnu s..ittono Crew• o MHIChr rl T..-S . ,..... ..., ..... s 0 I 1 Dvk•lr• Cf , 2 0 • 3100 kkmfttb 50J) 0 0 0 0 KHrnch lb S 0 I 1 1001 Mc.-yldlN SOIO 0 0 0 0 NI.,.,_ o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C•rtere SI I 0 5121 HJotlMIM 40 10 4001 Wltlonrf StOO I 0 0 0 "'"9dnlel , 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 Ell!« U 2 I I 1 4000 Gooden• ll 10 S 0 0 0 MCC>wlo 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 D Menlll N 0 I 0 0 I 0 D 0 I 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 ? 1 I 0 40 4 7 4 T.-. 'Sc_.,.,....._ J9 s' s Les A...-n 1• -•I •-4 NIA ........ COH,•lllMCI , .. AU ( ............ , T ... v"I SC.. l.akers llt, o. ... ta T.......,.• G.eftllt OelrOll et SO.Ion, S •-"' ISerlft tied, 2·2) • • 1'11ur'*v"I ...... Letren •• Debt, 6 • m. ILaken IMd. 3·21 'rldllY'• GINN Botton et DefrO!t, 6 om. (If MCHuiry) Setllf'cllV W $41Mey Delles et &.Mien, 12:30 ._m. (ff llKH .. rv) IMIMlliY't ~ Detroit •I 8o$ton, TBA (H ~) ullen m. rMWf'kS 102 OAt..L.AS -A~e l?-15 H 31, Ptnlll'\$ H 2·2 4, DoNllfton S-S 1-3 11, 811tekmen S-17 0-0 10, Heroer 7·15 S·6 It, T........., 7·14 •·S "· SCIV.,.... I·• 1-2 ), Devis , •• 0-0 •• ateb 0-0 0-0 0, Wennrngton 0-2 H 0, FerrM!" 0-1 0·0 0. Alford 1·3 O·O 2 TotelS 41·'7 lt•7' 1~. LAKaRS -Grffll 6·0 ·-· "· Worthv 12·" •·• 21. Abdul·Jet>ber 10·16 1·2 21. Johnson 7-14 O·O IS, Scott M2 2·2 17, M. ThomoM>n 3·6 0-0 6. c-4·6 2·4 11 Cernobell 1·2 1·2 3, Metthew\ o-o o-o o Smrett 0-1 ~o o, w~ 1-2 H 2 Tot1'1 Sl·IS 14·20 lit. o.llr ................ A long day for Bar~ns : J'oaAtaln Valley HlO llOftba11 coach Cary Baker •~ ta hl9 batter Tawday "a= ble Baron•' 1-0 lou to It. Paal in tbe CU' 4-A eeml e. . IOXING (et LM A11e111s) Deett .. """'"' DAYIY'S LOOC•lt ,......,. 8eedl) -S ' 'Dod1en . 27 20 .S74 S-5 ·;!ouston 27 21 .563 •12-4-6 Lost 2 Lost I Home Away 12-12 IS-8 17-8 1~13 14-13 11-13 12-13 11-14 13-1 s 5-17 NewYertl -.. eot 21-S T-ouu. w'*1 wlnn.no run KOt.i. Game Wl(llllne lll8t -Elsie.-12), k-llV~ DelH .,, • ,. 11-ln Lllren • JJ JI Jt 17-llt tioets 10. l!"Olefs ?1 D9rrecucll. ll2 bonito, to roo tlsll. 124 cetleo t>en, 23 Mfld be», 250 meckerll, lot Ku!Oin, 10 wlltle rist1, 1 tOle NEW.-otlT L.ANOtNO -2 boell. 1) anoler• u Ynd bHs, 3 ullco be», lO bonito. 6 rodl lrsll 4 Kulllfn, 2 blue _.Ch 1'1 P01.JNDS -MldlMI Nunn (._tll HotlV· wdoO) '"IOClled out Ron O.nlea (Peto ltofllff), "8COllCI round CNunn now >0·0. 21 bY llnoc:k9'LI. o..,ie1s now 11·7·1) •. · n Francisco 25 26 490 4 4-6 .:.(°incinnat1 23 21 .460 S1h 2-8 .San Diego 18 32 .360 101/J 4-6 Atlanta 16 31 .340 II S-S EAST DIVISlON New York 34 IS .694 -6-4 P1ttsburih 30 20 600 4111 6-4 .St. Louis 16 14 S20 81'1 6-4 Chicago 15 24 .510 9 7-3 Montreal 23 2S .'479 IO'h 6-4 Philadelphia · 19 18 .404,. 14 5.5 '· Tuesday's ~res Won I Lost 4 Won I Won I Won 2 Lost I Won I Won 1 Lost I Lost I 6-17 10-14 IS-7 19· 8 18-7 I 2-13 13-J 2 13-12 11-12 14-12 14-IO 9-1 S 11-1 I 8-17 E -<;oocsen DP-Los Anoelft 2. Loe-Los Anoeles 6, N-Yorlt 7 2&-<arter HR-Gib$0n <ti. Et1ter C•> S8-GllKC>n <Ill, McRevnolds 161, Sllelbv (4) S.--Dvl!Stre Les Aft9llH Sutton Crew' Orosco JHowd APene L.?·2 HewYertr Gooden McDwtt MvenW,3-0 Suttoo Pitched 8K-Sullon 2 ... " It ..... so s , 2 1-3 I 1·3 ' , , 2 , 0 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 , 2 2 2 1 0 1 I I 0 2 9 1·3 1 4 4 2 ) 2·) 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 1 IO 1 l>lller In Ille ''" U~rn-HOme. Pu"'· First, llllPOle\t; S«· J·Polnt ooeit-Aouirre. Jollmon, Scott, c_.. Fouled out-None lllebounch-De"H 41 (Taroiev 111. Lot AngeJn SS (Gretn 101 Anlsts-OellH 21 IHeroer 6), Los Anoeles 31 (John.on 20) Tote! touts-Deti.t 20, Lot Anoeln II Ttchnlcet-Aoulrre, Green A-17.SOS ~ . ' . . 'If • Tllfl .... , treut plMts LOS ANO•LIS -Bit lllodl Cr.-, (l.Jower) 819 Tulullol CrMll. CHl•lc l.ek•. Cutelc l.e90on, Cmiel L• .... El Dorado Perl! L•U. EUnbeth l.eke, Jeduon t..11•. Uttle .-oc:11 ,....,volt, "'9ck ltoed Peril U-e, Puddll!OllON Lelle, Sen Dlme1 lteMNOtr, Sen G.twlel ltt....,. ,.... •nd north '°"".) SAN 8allNAJlOtNO -Arrowbffr l.elle, 819 8-Lakt, C~ C,...., Green ValeV l.altl, Jenli.1 Like 1tl'YaJtS1D• -Futm« Like, Hemet L•llt, Pef'f'IS Leh. Stllnner L•k• FEA THE.-WEtGHTS -HU90 A119Uleno Clos A~) def Abe Gomez (Lot Aneelff), un•nlmous oec1i1on CAl19UllllO now 12·10-1. Gomez now 10-2>. • TuesdaY'I trMNcti.'11 8ASKIT8ALL ...-.. .. 111 .... Au.edl._ New York 5. Dod,en f ( 11 innings) C hicaco 4. C1nc1nnati 0 ono. Crewford, Tll•rd. Hervev T-33' A-JS.56-4 sonaALL Hith ""*' Cl~ 4·A SEMWINALS VENTURA -CelllH l.eke, Plru Like "'Sll"NTA IAJtlAltA -Cech\lt'N Like NEW JElt.SEY NI!~ Harrv Wet· tmen. vu 9fflldenl end ..-.i meneoer, to 1 muttlveer contrk'I ·-· .. San Francisco 9, Montreal 2 San Diego 8. Philadelphia 0 Atlanta 11. Pmsburgh I St. Louis 9. Houston 7 Today's Games Dodcers (Belcher 3-2) at New Yori.. (Fernandez 2-4). 4:35 p .m Cincinnati (Browning 2-2) at Chicago (G.Maddux 8-3). 11 :20 a.m. San Francisco (Downs 2-S) al Montreal (Youmans 1-3). 4:05 p.m. San Diego (Grant 1-4) at Ph1ladelph1a (Gross S-2). 4.JS p.m . Pmsburifl (Fisher 4-1) at A&lanta (Mahler 6-4). 4·40 pm St Louis (O'Ncal 2-2) at Ho uston (Darwin 2-4). 5.35 p.m nanday's Gamet C h1caio at New York. 4.35 p.m St. Louis at Ph1ladelph1a. 4:35 p.m. MonLreal at Pittsburgh. 4:35 p.m Only games scheduled c.-... NCAA WO.LO UlltaS ,~ ........ ) Atometle,..._ "'*"· .Mlel G•me I -Arl1on1 St., "56· 11, vs C•lllotnle, 40·73, 2 10 om Game 2 -W>dlltt St , 54· I•· I, vs Florlcle, '7·17·1 S 10 om Setvr9Y,,,_4 Geme 3 -Fr-SI vs StellfOfd 41·22 110 Pm Geme 4 -Mieml, Fi.., 51-12·1 vs Cel Stele l'Ufllrton, S 10 om sw.v,i..s G•mt s -Arlzone SI ·c.tlfornll IOM<' vs Widllt• SI ·Floride loler, 2·10 o.m Game • -Arlzone St ·Cellfornl• wlnne< "' Wldlll• St ·Fto<ld• winner. MO o.m. ~v.JuM• Geme 7 -"'-St ·St1nford loMr n Mleml·FullwtOfl loter. 2 10 o.m Cet H«ttl .. ,.1111, Cerr19M) St ,.ail! 1, ............ v...., • Fountern Vellev 000 000 00-0 1 SI Paul 000 000 01-1 0 Roce end Dolen. Kroolle and M#Keno Cl~ 2·A SEMl,tNALS W .......... I,.,.,..... I Woodb<IOO. 000 001 0--1 2 D Arrovo 000 000 ~ I 1 Bovd •ncl JOMM>n. TOdd end Mlrt"1ez ?8-0uoe rd IWl Ctl' HMl'IHA.LS scoau •·A s1 Peul 1, Founte•n V•ttev 0 Cl ""''no'> 8...en• 1. St JowPfl 0 J.A Kennedv l. Cllerter 0.k O Valene•• O. L• Mired• O (23 lnn1nos, 'usPrf!O.d. to be continUed tod•vl 2·A Woo0or1099 l. Arrovo O L•ou111 Hiiis • C or one 1 TENNIS French OMc\ l•t ,.~, ....... Qua~ .Jolln McEnroe IU S I IHds Ivan Lenci! !CZKllOSIOve!de ), 7·6 ••• , •-2 Andrei Clle.,,...O• (Soviet Un.ol det Pet CH ll (Aut1r••· lel 2·6 6·2, 6·• 6·3 w-··ou~ C.et>rlN S.l>lton• CAroentr~) det H ... n K•IHI CC•nade). 4 6 6· 1 •·3 Nicole Provr, CAustrell•l clei Arant•• S.llCNz 7·S 3·6. 6·4, N1t1li1 Zv~eve (Sov .. t Union) def Helene Sukove (C1ectio~v1a111. 6·2. 6 l MOC«•Y ........ Heca.., Leeeue NEW YOltl( ltANGElllS.--~ N\al"1l Jenuens. centef' ST LOUIS 8LUES-Sl9ntd Kettll OIOorne, riotlt wino, Glen F .. tl'lel'$tone. defenMmen, and Mike Wot•ll, center. C~UG8 ATLANTtC·lO CONFElllENCE--Ea*IOeCI the contract of lllon aertovldl, cornml»loner, tlVOUOh JUM lO, ltfO. GEORGIA SOUTHWESTEUt-A~ Ille rtsloNlk>fts .. Alfred aw-. ,,_., ... ". .... Mll•IOll c.oech, end lteeM Brldlmel\, 1u:111nt lootMI end '-cl ...WS CIMdl. ..,.,..,, wlll becomt men't '-cl bet«etbel coedl et Tlllkeoee Univtrlltv end 8fldgmen eulstant lootbel coecl'I 11 Olllehome Stele ST THOMAS AQUIN.\$-Hemed ltobtrf Holford men's Med belkerbell eoech TAlllLETON STATE-Announced Ille rtslO· 111tl0n of LM DrlOeen, lleed beWO.I coecll, to t•k• Ille \lmt 001itlon •I Herdln·SUnmont ... NIUC tmlC£ MLIC NOTICE NlJC NOTICE BOWMAN JUAN IT A WAYNE BOWMAN, resident pf Newport Beach J.nd Pleasanton. Cali- fonua. puled away .May 27, 1988 follow- , Ull an i.llne9I of 9e'V· ~ral weeks durauon. ,Survived by her lov- PACIFIC VIEW •llOlttAl PAMC Cemetery • M()(luary Cl'lapel • Cremato,y 3500 Pac1hc v .. w 0ffvt' Newp0r1 Beacl'I 64•-2700 HAR80R LAWN- MT. OUYE M 0ttuary • Cemetf"v Crt'mat0ty 1625 Gisi~ Avt' Cost .. M esa 5•0 555• NOTa • •111 The J*lllon tied Mrein II K 40U1 toceted In Orenge County, ~·• on conflrmtlllon of doing ~ u <:AU.MG fCMt M:>I NOTICa Of for the l>U'llOM of freeing IUNNOR COURT c.llf~ u follows Nie Ten percent of emoun1 GIAMPOLO PAOPEATY NOTICE 18 HEREBY "'9lJC aALa the eubject ctlMd kit ~ Of CAUPORMA Lot 2a of Tract No. SM4, bid to eccompeny the bid by ASSOCIATION II, 895 Town GIVEN ltlet the Boerd of Of NRaONA&. ment for adoption COUNTY Of ORAllG& u per map r«:Ofd«I In Q«11fi.d chec:ll, end the bel· Center DrMI, Suitt 1450. ing husband John H . CROSS Tru11 .. otttieFounlelnVlll-"'°""" Deted:APA2t 198& ,...._., Boe* 212. Pegee •'7_.e of anoe1obeP91donconflrm• eo..~.Celif mae Bowman three RANDALL (ft.Andy) leySc:tloolDiatrtctofOrenge •-11 KATHLIUI MO .. AN, .._.,,.._.,, Mlse.llaneou1 Map1, r• lion of Nie by the court CNMIH.Gleme>olo.ff5 d h ' L d · • County, Celfomla wlll,.. Notloellhef.tlyghtenlhal CLIM, ft~ A. 0111f1nt COfd«l In the office ot the Eumlnetlonoflltlle,record· Town Cent• DrMI. Sutt• aug ters, in a CROSS, palled away <*Ye bide up to end lndu<f.. purauent to S"ec:llon1 ~ MPUTY Ne. At• uo County Recorder Ing of conYeyanca, 1rwt1ter 1450, Coste Mete. CeNf Steen of Co.ta Mesa, May27, 1988inNew· 1ng2:00PM.June 1s.1eaa 21101-21115 of ttie Cell-(SEAL) NOTICaOflALIOf Tllllproper1yllcommonly tun enct MY tltla In· 92828 CA. Caroline Harrold port Belch. He la .. the ~ ~ or-lornte BuUMIU end PTo-WOOO.Wd end Mertln, MM.~ AT , ... red lo .. 2509 s . Rene IUrertee pollcy .... be at Iha ..... A.. GIMlpoeo, et5 of Irvine CA Manha survived by his wife flee, t1210•0ak Streat, ~Code. Secdon 2321 Attorney tor Pe11tionef1, MVATa aALa om.. s.nte Ana, CA 92704 npenee of the~ Town c.n.., om.. Sun• • • Fountain v~. Celfornla. oftheCaltomleCommercilil 18201 Von ic.rmen Avenue. Notice II hef.tly glYen The Nia 11 aublect to OJI(• The underllQned r~ 1450 Costa ~ Calf Go Id be r g of Blair, one daughter AT tNe time, cset., end Code, s.:tlon 535 of the 8ulte1140, lrltne, CA 92715 tl'llrl. aubfec:t toconftrmetlon rent tu•.~. coo-the right 10 rW.. to eccept 9M ' · Pleasanton, CA, and Am~. list.er Natalie, pleol, bldl wtll be publlc:ty c.ltfomla P9Nll~ end Publlhed Orenge Cout by ttr1s court. on June 22. ditlona, reetr1c:tlon1, r .... eny bJd1 Thtl bu•IMM 11 con.- aon John w. Bowman and father Gerald ~ Ind reed eloud for the pnM9lone of the Cell-o.My Plot Mey H. 111. 25, 1~ea. et 10:00 A.M., or va11on1. rlg11t1, r1Qh19 of wey, Deted: May 21. 1Ha ducted by: llulbend. endwff41 of Pleasanton CA· c v· . t.aU' at Bid No. 88.05 for Audio VI• fornl• Auction ~etna June 1, 1N8 "* .. ,,.Within the time .... end ...ameni. of record. Ohe II. ......,, Admtn-Clwlee.H. ~ . . • • roa. Lii on ua1 Equipment Act. the undenlgned will Ml W055 loWed by law, lhe under· with eny enc:umbrencee of .. .,..., of-. htMe el... Thll 11...,,_,1 wee llled 515\er V1reirua Grom Paci f i c V i e w 8"' document• and~ et publlc .... byoompetltiw __ .,. 8lftTM"C ligr'9d .. edmlnlWetor of record 10 be •tllfled from lem T • .._., with the Ccunty Cl9r1l of Of. of La Mirada, CA; Mortuary. 3500 Pa-ftcetlonl ••on Ille •• the blddlnO on the 9th ~ of ..-..... ""'-. the Eltete of the ~the purc:tllile pttce. Ouml -..aruyame, At· enoe County Ofl May n . brother William S cific View Drive Diatrlc:t Office Pufc:hUlng June, 1N8, at 1:30 o'docll 8 •• nemed deoecflnt ...... at Bide or ofterl we Invited tomey tor Mmlnlltmor •Ma W 1 _ .._.,_..._ • • Deperlment located al AM on the ~ ...._ ~ .... io the ~ lot thle' Pf°'*1Y end mat Pu~ Ofenge Coelt PJl14G ayne of .... mu-. Newport Beaeh, 11210 OM Strwt, Fountain Mid pr~ flea Mefl MOTa M tnd beat nee b&dder on the be In writing end wtll be r• o..ey PPot May 25, 2t. "'-Pvbllehed Of C09ll CA; el~ grand-Wedne9day June 1, Velley, Cellfornle. (71 •) elor9d, and wtllctl are ~ *1ne end condltlone her.-cefYed et the omc:e of WOf1d 1, tNI Piiot June~ 15. H. children and three l2~ p M tD 6·00 143-32•5 located at Pubic Storage "'°""" lnaft« mentioned all rlgM. Realty • Plaza. 11e Weet . WTh065 111 andchild -. .:_ . . The Boerd of Trust .. ,. 20l5 ~ Avenue ln tltle, and lntetwet of lhe • MKArthur Blvd .. Sent• Ana. W.073 great-gr ren. P .M. "'uneral .ervices ....,.. the nght to l9jec:t MY tM Olty of eo.te ,....., #a.17 I cedant at the time of death CA 92707. et any time aft• Pl8JC NOTIC£ ,..._ _______ ...... Her many relatives, Thunday, June 2, lndallbkl .. ndtowaflleany County of Or8nge, 8taM of Notlcellher9bya!Yenlhat end all right. tltle. and flrlt publtc:atlon of thll no-1-------..-..;.;;....._1Thllllacir-t1.lmetobUy fnends and acquaint· 1988 at 4:00 P.M. at lrregvlerltlM therein The Callfomlal, the pde, ~t· pur1uant to •ec:llont lnter•t tl\at tM .. l•t• ec:-tlee end before any Nia le k D1ln lllat fltNng bOMyou've ancesare~ully the Newport Harbor~::':~e:::!':.:=.:r:::~~,,::=-2~ !': ~:;:-'~:'u:.°1::!:~oflalec:&lfllnlew-~A~N ::===.:::-·• mVlt.ed to attend the Lutheran Church, hem. Wtd/Of aetvtcM wt"dl ..,. of. flaaaloneCode, Sec:tton 2321 OMttl. 1n ttie , ... Pfoperty tu1 mon9Y of the United The to11ow1ng per.one.,. c:a.telfted. ~~M798Do~~ve.~~~~~ ~K~~.Sp.E=~~=~---------------------~----~-------­ Saturday, June 4th, Newport Beach, CA . ..,.... lhe n.dl of the 0. 171-eofa. • 30 "*bu, CallfOmia Penal Code end at 10:00 A.M. F~-lnler'mmt priva~. '~ecs tNa 2ttt1 dty of ~.n:d ~. Sp. E the prcMllonl of the Call- v 1ew Community Mey, lHa 121-bllte,Ndeabed.•t,_, tomla Auction UcenlNng Church 2525 Fair HAVE Mt lhMlQ. ~ 2 mt,.. Act.tM~wlll ... view Rd C.osta Mesa. . 'OUNTAUt YALUY Mltic: b.-. 1'1. trictO · at publlc: .... byc:om99tltllle ,. Califo~; Dr Gari A NIED? :="o:'!~o!:..:: to=:;.-:'~ =ia:.~~2~:.:0: Pt!RCE IROTitl"I Barmore ofhdat.ing AeMt muat,. rNKte wlttl Ga11f1 onty PM on the .,,.,,._ ...,. IEU MOADWAY Donations may ~ leod t~ dossif1ed poges •-.1ewe4/ ~n-41 encl Dttld. for at die rime of Nici P'OP9'1Y "• bMf't TRADE .now Morl ,...___, ond • ,.__.. I. -. · DINMaf, purct.... All purc:l\aMd ttored. and wtllch are t 10u:J~;:;" made k> the American you re sure to fJA 11! ._.._.. ..,__ goocte .,e told • .., end IOc:ated at PWlc: ltorlif9 Cotta M... Cancer Society or Iii Pild PUOlthed ~ COMC ""*ber9m0¥edMINttme 1725PomonaA119nWlftlhe ~~2 .. 150 Cancer Hospice •• n-o..Pllot.iun.1 1 ... of ..... S.tubjecttopmrCltYofeo.ta~,County ,_ -F ._. llll ~, ' ' c.MClalatlon In IN 9Wf'll of of Ofenge. St• of cal· ~~~~5~S5~b=~==·=====~~~3~·~~~===~=======~=;n~l~,~~~b•tt1e~~~or ~· encl ObffOeted peny. 0.ted perlOnel propefty deec:ribed ttlla 25th encl 1tt csey Of May betow In the mat*9 of: STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? and June. 1918. Publlc Metlat~.89 10111-t Storage M~. Inc. entque dW'I. 2 dtaerl.11 ttffd T111911loM (1111) 244-IOIO, ~~ld·...:re~. F ~~· t~·--~ Daly ......, ...._Oianii .. ~1 Ed &poatto/CH Con-1• ... _, ~ 2f; -'9'Nc:tlon. Sp I 023-<*ldr WOf7 e.tc:ti. WOOd ""*'· WOOdl'I P...,. atop by to flle your. --------1..-0:., ..,..,.. ._ rtcl'lt flctltloua busineta •tatement at PmUC llOTIC( to* et ttie ..... ~ the Daily Piiot L. o.p.t-____ ...._. __ lftl'9t .. madewttt1ce1t10frt, ment, 330 Wett Bay, Colla ~:' and J:'. for • ttie .,... OI Meea, Cattfor™-. H you CM not COUllTY OI' COU.U pur · All puroMMd ltopby,~callUI 111~ ...... un-.:=e~,.,:.,:~= .. (714) &42~21, EdentlOn ........ • of ............. .,. 315 Of 311 end we .. l'Nke A ............. _ RHflllt ...... of •rangementa fot you to Mndle = .:-...=-., = :.."'.:;.:r=, = 1hlt procedUN ~ ,,..._ PGlc:-.;' J::t .,_ *',_and lit~ 4' .,._ "you ~ hew """ fur1hilt • anaw. _. JUM, '"'· ~ QU99ttone,pteueCllllU11ndwe '" 11 .._ =~;&'~: wll be more than gled 10 .-.. ........_. OMMt' ~"' o.. . ... 0....... "'•Nd ow. Co.e . ... . .. ~O:~M* In CA••r•D IT) = .... ..._If: JwM 1 ...... ,., .....,. . . ~JUul-=--.... ___ ..,..:__~~!!!~~~-~~~lltl!!'._ ___ _._,----~~--- =--r-----·1t1ne .. '\!-......... ., fllllS llJllC( .... d ............. ~;;;;;;:;;;;;;=:~J .... ~ ,- ., ....... Oowrt,.. ................... e.ss: .• · ..... ., ............ .... CIMa. C1B1.ii•iiii~--~--il, --~-.......... --................. ... ..... ...................... ....... ,....._ .... :l::t-:.-=.= ~­~wn=;~·-...... ----~~r:;n ..... YOU CAN FIND IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDI .. CALL CLASSIFIED ttl-1171 • .aJ .. .. .. CALL . 842-5878 'FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220 FROM SOUTH ORANGE 4Ma00 You can now cell the Dellr Piiot Claealtled Dept. on 88turd8J momll'.'I from 1:00 to 11:30 a.m. to pl8Ce your Sunday and~ eda. •1Nman .... ,. MOUAl/CONDOI ......, . ,. ..... ~. , .. ..... ,..... ,. c..,.._..... 101• <-•-,., c..-·'°'' ........ . .. • ..... • • ICllP ....... .,,...... ... ................ , .. ................... ,.. -...... ,, ... ............ . ... '--ICllS .,_.....,, *' .._,._. IOH -"'-'°" _,......... IW ._ °"""""' I OH ~--c..... .... ._.... ' ·-=~":!.. . ..::: .... '-·-._ 1090 • ~. ......... ............ c..,.._ ..... C..-*11-c..-. 0... .... ru-... ........ 11119t ............... ~ ......... -·· ... . i..,... ...... . '-····. ............ ~ ...... -~· ~ ..... . ... a--.... .. --~ ....... . CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COLDWeLL BANl(eRO MC)..1220 4111100 ....... ,, .. MllC. alNTALI aa••••••••n• ..,.,_ .,.. •••••••• ....... ._..... . It .. ~ t19t .... ---j IF ftl•Y .... <-_ ,, .. ...... ,,.. .,,...... ,.,., .._,~ ..,. ..... i..,... ,,. ..... VO. ,._ -...,_ -,,....... ...... ·-,, ... .......... "'' ----..... ....-.c.-...., AIJAJITMl.I _ ..... tm ---·-.. , tv _...._ .cm ......... ,.,, . ,_ •• ..,.. __ VJt o••a•s•us 0.-. .. . ,.. ............. '740 ........... ,.. ~ .. 210 o.-.1 .,. 0.-..-'1011 ..... ~ ,., ,., .. ..... _ ••Ot ""'"*-...... ,. .. --... ••Gr -"'" c-•--·· )622 , ...... ... c-.. _ ••n """ 101• c--~ ....,._, .. • 1180 c:--.. , . s.-1• "''• o.. .... I.a. IMMOYllllll ......, ,,. ~ 0...-..,. ~ ,. .. ··-1'JJ ~ON. ,... "--. .,,. ,__, ......... ,~ ,.. ..............., ,.,. ~0.-... JO•• ,_,,_ ~ .-......--••.O __ !_,.._ ,., ........ ....... ,.. ,.....,_ UJO ... SSlO ...__ ... , MISC • ~ ......... ,.., .....,._w_ ,,,, 0...1.__ im .,_. . .... -,... a.....t iSJf '--.... -.,. i...... ..... --t--.-..--SIU '--.. ,., '--'""· ·-.,. '----'-...... .,., _,,....,_ IOll i..,_ ....... ,.., .......... _,,_ .. ., .._,_, . MN ,...__ .... AUTOMOTIVI _._...,. ,.., ...._. .... ~ ...o.-WI .__c:.--Ho1'I ..__ ,.. "'-......... ,... .... c--. ,... .... '-,.. ,_ ,. PUBLICATION OEAOllNE ~ ........... Sat. 11:30 AM Tueedey ........... Mon. 5:30 PM W~ ..... y..,.._ 5:30 PM Thureday .......... W9d. 5:30 PM Frtdey-........ _. Thuta. 5:30 PM 8aturdey ...... , ... Frt 5:30 PM &Jnday .......... Sat. 11·30 AM .._ ...._ .. ., ,...._.. __ ,...... .,., _,,_ tOIO .. _ , __ ,_ .... -.. _,,,_._ ... -·---.. ... C-&..._ ·-~ '--VICI -... ,,._ .. ,.., .__a-.... ~ ..... ,..,. MBCIOmY -... .......-t9"l ......, ttoo a...'-&.__ .. Cl..ASSfFlED OFRCE HOURS r....,....,. .. s.w:. Mond•yFl'ld9y 1·00 AM-5:30 PM aaudey a.1>0 ,.....11 30 AM . eu....eouni. Wondey--FrlcWf 1:00 AM...S"OO PM IG-587I The Oaity Pilot strM!tS 10< efflCteney and 8Ceurecy However, ~lly err0<1 oo occur Please hsten when your ad 11 reed beGll and Check your ad daily Report err0<s immeo1at•y to 6'2-56711 The Dally Pilot accepts no 11at>11oty f<>< &r1y eHOf 1n an adverttsement for wnich 11 may be rMp0051ble except for the cost of the space actual!y occupied by the error Credit can only be atlow9d fO< the f1rst 1nsertton S--0..-. °' ..... ~ c.. G.lode _.._ "9.ibt ... T-e>per.-"--""'--Pll0 ... -30 ...... ...... ..,; lie _,... IO IM "°' ....... to • ....,_ Cf'M .. ~ •• """'of _.._., ---1>9 _ .. _, ___ _,, _ -e!'Of'_I_ $2.56 per day n.t•a AU you P9Y f~ 3 .... 30 dmy mlnmum In the SERVICE DIEC TORY Y04Jlf s.vtc:. Directory Aes>!-•ta11Ye M2-G21 td.110 .. • CUSTOMER SEftVICE REP 2 positions available in our cus- .tomer service dept. Must have pleasant phone per- sonality; typing a plus. Learn valuable office skills and earn $5.00 an hour to start Hours are 11 :30 A.M. -8:30 P .M. and Sat. & Sun. 6 A.M. -10:30 A.M. Call 642-4321 ext. 207 to sched- ule an &PP.Ointment. Ask for Llolanda. ! .................... ~·Iona end job an-' nouncementa evel&able st t Newapaper :1 the Nevada Co Dept of i-:r~~~: SPREAD : .~:=-~. THE i SllC:famento, CA i _ (e~~n~a N Ews Mal appUcaUone to Merit t Sylt9m ServlcH by· t t 8/ 17 /H. Equal Op· • • portunlty ~ i Work In the ever expanding News-i Wlli HI 1111 · oaper Promotion field! If you are .. i aelf-motlvated and like working wtth The <>r.nge eo.t o.11y teenagers, this may be the op.-Noc la loolltno tot a11 portunlty you've been waiting for. ::'::'~.:C,: 3 dayt during the ...,,.., t This la a GUARANTEED INCOME of WMkeftd9 and holdayt. t $400 per week to start wtth poten-::::= :' = ~ t tlal earnings of up to $1000 per drtYer9 me... ptOof of t week. lnaurance and OMV • pttnt-out Star1tng ~ .. '";~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ An Insured van, wagon, pick-anowanc.. i 17.00 per hour p!\19 OM 1:; up/shells are a MUST. i eome 1n to *l>PIY at. ly a~ Cilrier's job · onfarsbe. If you're 10 or order, a job as a newspaper carrier might be jutt your size. Just send in this coupon or can: ~2-'4333. Routes are available nowl ..... .., .... ..., Net wrier1 • For more Information i Illy f111 Call Mr. ~amee i , ..... .., ... (213) 477-2870 i ~-=~= • Or c.11 ~ at 14~21 .................... ut.205 · -Motor ·Routes . available In Cod1 l111 lulltlllf01 l11oh Fo11tli1 llll1r NO-COLlECTING NO SOLICITING • Ml.IC MJTlC( Selective Service Registration. It's Quick. It's Easy. .. RECYCLE through the DAILY PILOT Classlfled P11ges Tum unwanted Items Into money today/ Cetl6U·W71 546-1200 11.ll .c.e.-.. '7t RED TOYOTA OOROl•-------1 JOHNSON Ii. SU,.. l1nr Olfl M1 • "' r ~~ ··-...... (vale Me•• ~' > ()U)8 '71 CVT\.AltE PREME 2 *·good , ldntt,..,. ........ °'* ~~'*' 87 11 OLDS '11 CUTl.>81 BROUGHAM. 4 dt1 Jllnt cond. lrtfV/lnt -ml. fUlly loeded ~ ~ BEST OFFEA 176-la tit OLLA SR-5 UB. 5 e;id. --------1---------~=-~',,/'~tit! G A R A G E S A l £~~ nu °'19 owner S2350 It'' that time ogoinl Matte sure your ~ 080 S40-5'91eft7pm mi~. 7i"SUPEABEATLE cONV ~ IS 0 SUCCfti by odYeftislng .,. demi ~. All new intw Pnt 2 yra. toe> S1ort your od two dayl ~ th• w>le 1o new. radial tir• & more. attract th. most buywl ". ~~2~~~· 142-5118 . . . MOC mm .· . The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH 5.10!t!l ... . ~payme~t-........ 4 Llnes-7 Days s 1 o·.·80 . NAME __ ---. ~£----------~ AOOIE1S_ CITY ~ STATE ZJl' _____ ....... ......,~.':111 AD COP'/; 4 Bne mirinun. ll•lf.DSJfa.dY '.4 wardl Ptt line. AMT. ENCLOSED _____ ..._ ·' • ' Politjcs holds few ~tees. . Tbe Republican primary in. the 40th Congressional District is an ~xception. When the voies #are counted, citizens m Costa Mesa. Newpe>n Beach. Laauna Beach, Irvine, fountain Vatley and :-pans of HuntiJl&ton ~h can be sure they won't be amnng :· the losers. . : . :! Any of the 1hrec leaders in the race to succeed tetiring :: Rep. Robert Badham, R-Ncwport Beach, ~n be considered · . . winners. . Voter registration· percentages in the district ali but guarantee theRcpublica.n nominee e scat in Congress,° which explains our decision to endorse in the primary rather than wait until November. This is the race th~ truly couots. · : Jn that context, voters arc fortunate because the race is •. marked by quality and by choices. 2 . Nathan Roscnbera. Dave Baker and Chrie Cox would an· • ::-make credible congressmen. They bring a fresh perspective and a youthful enthusiasm that makes change ~m possible. And as frcshineo, each has pledged to approach the job with ".110~ sensitivjty to the needs of the district than tJlc incumbent b4$ dcmonstrat~ durt,1g parts of his 12-year tenure on the Hill. · . Baker, 34, is an Irvine city councilman, fonncr mayor, attorney and the choice of the ~unty's GOP party leadership. The former UCI baskctbalf siar won Badham 's endorsement. But be lost points with his mishandfing of embarrassing :· revelations that he had an exira-marital-,affair .. The affair did not cost Baker his marri~$C but it may cost him a shot at • Congress. Voters-don't insut their candidates be sa'ints, but ::~ they do insist on being treated honestly. Baker's attcm1'l to .:! build bis campaign on a cornerstone of intevitY and ::, traditional family values doesn't ring true. ::· Still, Baker has compiled a solid reco(d of public service ·:: in Irvine and shouldn't be dismissed for a si'ngle transgression. He bas served bis constituency well and-was instrumental in offering a creative solution to the latch-key child problem by ~·· belpina form a model child-care prosram in the city. In fact, • Baker's experience and expertise seem wefl suited to local problem solvins.-His hean belongs to IJ:vine. We would like to see Baker servihg.on the county Board of Supervisors. · .. If intelligence equaled v&es, Cox, JS. would win in a landslide. The man is smart and · ext>Crienced, a rare combination. . · · /!'>- He graduated from USC magna cum lau~c in \hree years with a double major in English and pc)litical science. He attended Harvard Law and Har'(l\rd' Business schools simultancously,eamin&a law~and a mastcfsdegree 1n business administration-il'I addition· to editing the Law Review. He practiced law in Newi>ort Beach, CQ::.founded a . company that lraJlSlates the Soviet Union's affic~I news-· paper, Pravda, into English and worked for two years in the White House as senior associate counsel to-President Reagan. Already Cox has drafted a bill to reform the federal ~udgct process and take a whack at the defitll .. ~dd in a.long hs~ of endorsements from the GOPtS right wing, focluding Oltver Nonh, and voters are offered a terribly impressive conservative candidate. But therein lies the rub. Jf Cox has a weakness. it is his unyielding c9nservat1sm. He is as ideologically risid as he 1s intelligent: We woi:ry such a doged adherence to political philosophy. while adrturablc, could actually handicap Cox's cffectiven~. Could he moderate his views if necessary? h he capable of compromise? How effective would he be In a Democratic controlled House operating under what very well may be a Democratic administration? And, finally, how well woulsf • such d~atic conservatism serve voters throughout the entire district, including moderate Republicans and Demo- crats. Rosenberg, 35, appears to be the answe~ to those seriou~ questions. For this race has actually boiled down to more a question of tone and style than of clear differences on issues. And Rosenberg has style. Of all the candidates, fTont- rum~ers <?r loni shots, Rosenberg is by far the most charismatic. He 1s drawn to people and they rcspof\d. He is a classic leader. Rosenberg's moderate approach promotes unity ~mong district voters who arc not as homogeneous a group as 1s mistakenly thought. If politics is the art of compromise, Rosenberg, is th~ _consummate artist in the group. After all, Rosenberg s pohucaJ teeth were cut working for a Democrat. Rosenberg brings a refreshing perspective to the campaign, perhaps because he is not cut from legal cloth. He 1s the only one of the three who is not an attorney. The people m Washington, O.C.. and government in general could use a little less legalism and bat more humanasm when it comes to problem solving. ln other words. Rosenberg is an independent thinker who is not afraid to take independent stands. He bucked the establishment in 1986 and didn't back down when it may have been more politically expedient. And. again in thi$ year's ~lcction,. Rosenberg ~as shown he is comfortab~e operating JUSt outside the establishment's mainstream. He 1s not afraid to take eutsy risks. Y cs, he is ambitious. But we don't see tha& as a weakness. Motivation makes success possible. Roscnbera must achieve for his constituents to make himself successfut. Jt is a win. win situation. As far as est. sinis1cr ~rences to mi net control cults and arand conspiracies, we see only ineffective mudslinging. It won't stick. Finally, Roscnbcra ofTen what the 40th Congressional District so sorely needs -a candidate who promises to be true to his distnct first. Rosenberg has constructed a grass- roots carnpaian that is designed to draw people into the political process. And his emphasis, if elected, is to continue that a_pproach by servina people first, issues second. · Globll concerns are imponanL Appropriations and defense need attention. BU1 this district has been taken for p'lnaed too Jona. Rosen~ wiJJ concentrate on riahtina that. In sum. the Dlily Pilot believes Nathan Rotenbera i•the riabt man to send to Conpess. ! ,. I ,.,. r• .... ,_ Am(ilet(-...... .. 1 • ....... L4JU.. . . .. IQ..~tftltol .. ,~ .. \ --·~ . • \'. /1~.n _ ... .____.._ ~ACRAMENTO -Once, it was said, ttt.e Caljfomia Lqislaturc was -.• the finest bbdy of lawmaken U> be * · fouhd m the Urutcd States. .... -. .. DAN . WAL.JERS ' It was. its admirers wd, attenuve, wcll-stalTed with -experts io-finance an<J policy Gelds and responsive to the needs ofa rapid I~ a.rowing nation- state. The: praise came after -an elttetts1ve overhaul of the l..qls- lature's operations in the 1960s at the co~ragc because of cost. behest of then-Assembly "Speaker It's not a Stmplt, problem. It Jesse Unruh. . • . tr}vblves a myriad ofspecific issues, T.he accolaJics heaped . upon the such as terr'itorial-rates, minjmal s.,tc l.Agislaturc acenerat1on ago probably qlllat19n of insurers, liability laws were overblown. h never was as and t~ roJe of the lepJ profess:ion. cfTecuve as dcpitted, and SOO\e of its · It's One that involves incredible supposed attributes turned out to be sums of money, which means that oegauves. thost directly involved -insurers But however well it once fllnc· and -tiia~ lawyers ..__are sparing no t1oncd, tt was-a whale of a lot better expense '" protecting their pocket-. th•n it functions-now. · bQok interests · The past decade~ ICCD •spec-'Therearc,mofe9ver.noquickfixes tacular expa,nsion o 1hc lqjslatQre's tha\ will ma&itaU.y reduce premiums spending o~ \llClf now approachin1 b)' ·substaotal •'mounts. Even mar- $200 rmlhoe a year). an. even more IJPI d~ll.COsts would ~uire spectacular increase in .cami>ai&n ··.a~utltp ·assa.u11 that wQ1'.ld spendina ($7()..plus million this y~r), ~ the financial pajo. . the crca1ion of countless new com-And it's an emotional issue. Cali-· mutecs. the hirinaofhundreds of new · fomians arc angy abaut the present advisers -and a dramatic plunge in s~lCO'l ·and are seeking some outlet tts lqaslativc output. for'tha~anscr. : •. : .. h's difficult lO name even. one • The Legislat.ure ·has a clear rc- major policy issue facinl Calif.ia sponslbilily to create policy. -educallon, traniP,91"tation. en-.8\Jt it has failed. •b)~tly. It has virooment.al dqntdation, h0uS'ing. demorfstrated that it simply cannot etc. -that the l..e&i$lature hits put aside:. the entreaucs of. the l~ add~d adequately. Most, in fact. byists and the int*t of the campaicn ~ have-simply been •anorcd. · . . contribot1ons and do the ~pie's , , But there's no mt>tt! strikitU exam-business. It tuts demonstrated, in fact, pl( of leaislative dalliance lhan tal~-1that when it' comes to dcaUna with fomta 's · ra~dly worsenina crisis in this clear mandate for policymakina. automobile insur1n~ I\ is ta~ina a walk. It is optina ouL It •\ lnsuran~ premiums arc sky-has declared itself to be irrelevant and tocketinJ. and a frightening' number im·potcnt. ·of California's motorists -~•n-It pretepds to do something. It datary-insurance laws notWithstand-holds hearinp and Stage$ press con- -il'll -arc Ol)tlng to drive without fercnees and. issues a flood of news .· .. ... IELLS . Planning ptolongs pamper~ng ... made the miatake or tak.ina off .my robe and 1own too soon,•• Lois 111d. • . , 1 knew I would have to hear about her operation aooner or later so I asked the key question. "What do you meanr• She ~plained. If you have an attentive and concerned family, Wb.ietl she bas. they hover over you wben . you come home from the bolpiw. No Uak is 100 }8rlC or too , 1mall for them to lalle ~ of. Lois didn't tel pihy beina Watkd on: she r. tOld berielr iftet' what alle had been thn>Ul)l lbe ~ -..ecltJai(auention . She t.eft. 10 feel beUcf. One mom.ins .ifter sbe bnalMd her teeth -~sbe.baid coevincid W. husband \Mt ihe _..capable of cleiftl that by bend( -She put on a amidat of li~k Ind a tittle bhalher. That was ber first mistake. When one of ber son1 bro .. ber breakfast tray in,. be looked surpriled and said, "Hev, you're fcelina better, aren't y~1" And he didn't tuck the napkin relea$CS. But when it comes to the under. her chin or ttk the supr into bottom line, nothin1 bas oc:cul'l"ed. her coffee.,. · And that means that the special It didri't resister at lint. so Lois interests involved, such u lbc trial continuedtoapplyalinlemakeupthc la""'e"' who wan• to protect their nexuwo mominas becaute she didn't •• 1 ·.., • like the way she looked when she riahU to sue, and the insurance ~sscd the mirror 1n the bethroom . comP.1nics, which want to avoid b __ ,, d h •-_,, dired state -ulation oif' ,.. .... will er usUIUIUan eraons~e .. t~ · ~. -.. because mom was doina so well. sell their AutStionablc n<>1trums Yesterdar momina she awakened directly to votm via initiatives. lo the smel of freshly brewed coffee .. One can IC&Rlely keep tnick of the and the voice1 of her husband and auto-in~ initiativa that are sons havina breakfast. She knew as floating thioUtb the state. The trial aoon as they finished they would be lawy¢trand their allies are promotina bri~na breakfast to her. rate rcplation u their penaca, while Tired of draaint around in robe the insurers are pushina no-fault and aown, she slipped into • blouse, · insurance that would reduce the pents and shoes. She put on her Ja,era' role, and varioos other dlakeup and fussed with her hair. individuals and sroups arc off'erina That was her second mistake. their own venions. When she shuffled into the kitchen At U.C moment, the ~or con-all three of them applauded and said lenckn are fiahtina in the oouru, in unison, "Mom. you're well!" trying to knock each other's measures Son Ted stopped buttcnna her out of the runnina t>Y cllimina ... 1 toast and her husband handed her the deficiencies. The fant no-fault 1n:" spatula and the two CUI he was itiativcwasinvalida&ed by .... couru holc:lina.-The¥-both pve her a hasty and another was filed. lus.s and made a hastier exit out the All of this activity is enricbina front door. siana_tUR>$1thcrina and camptisn-Her older son sesturcd toward the ma~t firms, but it means that coffetmaker and called over his California votm will be assaulted -shoulder as he followed them, "Cof· already are beinaauaulted, in fact-fee is a little strona this momina. but by simp&illic media · ~ de-it will be OK if you add some hot mandjfts • that lheY • dtoole from water to it. .. amo,_ compeliaa. ~purpose "I Sot the distinct 1mpttSS1on they measures,; l , expec1cd to come home and find h's a poor way lO mm public dinner on the table that ni&ht." lots policy but it may be the only way, ·said. becaute the ~stature bu made a "And was it?" collective decis1on to milk the situ-.. No, bu\ the boys sent out for ation for as mup. media auention Meiucan food and bad a feast. and campai&n money u ~blc Wouldn't you think they'd know I without doi:nJ anythina. couldn't handle Mexican food after All of which makes ~ wonder what I've been throu&h?" why we need a Lqislaturc at all. After hcarin1 the story, it occurred Da Wall#s "-• •Tll'lb'*' to me I should ask how she felt. ~..W.I la~ • "Oh. I feel pat, but J think I ./ detetvtd a few more days of beina ---1111111--------------------------•-111111111#111!1-~ ~vc:red over Ud waited on. N~t wne. n1 Play it difftrcattr ... c11:a.pa~gn strategists bave ·di$turbiD.g news for Bush MARTY SMITH • I s-.stecl that she tel bide in the aown lid robe and take to her bed for afcw~days: ..,.. late; f, blew it. Once you aet out o,. the robe and1 aowu they will stop fisht in the middle ~whatever they'~ doi., for you:· LOi,1uid me called and ioJd me this because she didn't wana me to make the ame mistake when I hid SU'ICfY. I didn "t have to consult My calendar. I have no SWJCTY scheduled. but I thanked her and assured her that should such an occasion arite, I would remember what she told me. It won't be easy. I'm always In a hurry to takeoff'myaown and robe-aureery or no sureery. w.u. u~. "' T OD~Y IN His TORY I • .. .. .. .. - . { tnt1£r WEDNESDAY. JUNE i. 1918 • . iiiiil~:------~----------~--------mll!I------------------------~~--------------------------------------------~-....---~--------------------: . . cmcKEN GRATINE ~I. \r . MEDITERRANEAN ~ , · VEGETABLE SOUP ; 2 .... carrots. cut Into l-lncb pleca 2 ......... celery, cut into );.Gd pieces 1 large Olilon, sUced 3/4 mp'"*" 1/3 aap CounoWer C-OpK 3 whole chicken bnr ••• spit, sklnatd wl boned (11/l ~ boack•) 1 can (10 3/4 ounces) Campbell's COGdemed Golen Cllllllc broccoll eoup 1/2 cup,Mlf........., 3/4amp .... Swm cMele. ••Wed 1/8 ceaspooa pepper I 1 mbltspoon olhe oO ' 1 ~ dllaly sliced (wblR ponioO' onlJ) 114 aap-.., dlopped . 1 ..... doft prlc.,• ell 1 tablespoon dMpped trab .......... 1 Millfll•*Wbasil ~cnshed 2 cam <» 31' ounces me~) 0.p ... CODlkmed Golden Cla9lic cMd:en tlfll'table -P °' 2 ams (la 1/2 omces mdl) •· CWpllel'sc,..fi-d Goldlll C°llllic cbee9e .,.... .... or today\ fast-paced hfcstylcs, leisure time is a rare cOm- modity. A leading authority on entettalnina and cuqueae. Letitia Baldrige says that C\'C1')'0flC can. and should. nke time i>r the-dinner party . . . a sWldard in cnfe11ai.nmcnt for the generation bd>rc us. . "There is nodUng more precious than an evanng d good bxl and derest- ing conversation-and a dinner party need not imol't'C much v.ork.at all" says Baldrige. She su~ a simple. yet elegant menu and adds ~t advance prepararion will allow for more time with guesb. The k>cal point of CYCf)' dinner pany is the food. Convenient, high quality ingredients.. such as Campbctrs Golden Classic soups .and c:ouiYoisier Cognac. will help ensure a memorable meal. Made from prern!Wll mgrtdients and nothing artifirul, Campbelfs Golden Classic soups can be used to make a variety of delicious and ~to­ prql91C recipes. A wch of fine cognac. such as Counoisier, enlivens any appetizer, entrce or dcsscn to crease a unique taste scosation. . . Herc:!> a menu.that's sure to set the mood for a fun and.festive evenang - Mcd1tcrranean Vegetable Soup as an appct!z.er. Chicken Gratine with a salad as the cntrcc. and Festive Fruit and Nut Tan as the ~ , M~1tcrranean ~blc Soup 1~ a delJC•OUS. first course rJtat takes )USt nunutes to prware. Chicken Gratme. whlcb c.an tie prepared in advance, i.s 1 lletightful entrcc that blends chicken and Yepblcs in a rich sauce. Festive Fruit and Nut Tan. dehclOUSly laced with cognac. combines an almond-crumb Crust, 00-bakc filling ancf fresh seasonal fru Its k>f the per· feet ending to a spccl&I meal. - J'his menu is sure to provide a pleasurable ~g with minimal ~ and maiumum cn.JOYlllCDl br the host aDd ~ MO$l importantly. everyone .win. enjoy great bx1 and good company. FFSflVE FRUIT AND NUT TART '~ I PASTRY: 1 I I 4 cups ftneJy chopped ........ uptly t..-.1 (not ground) 1 1/4 cups~ Oour. l /l cup bllltn'. mt ID small~ 1 tabkspoma Counoisie.r CGpK PASTRY CREAM: 1 pee"• (I GUDCeS) cram ~ ...... l /4 cup orance juice I 'ft!SPl'OD P'*d oranp peel GLAZE: l / 4 cup mpplt jelly l /l • ., !»09 ~ o.p.c ·~bone) I tlib&espoClft Wlilta' l / l traspoon 9lmond edJ"llct 1/4 tempoon ~ mnct l / 4 cup confecdoners' sugar. sifted l /2 ~ wniDa atnd l ~o....-... CnpK Slktd ,,_ ft'Wl (pee<Ms, 5t1"11Wba I ieS, dit.) ' 2 ... CMIWlllll!r . PIDcla ..m'Oti or l/~W lfD• I. To poach chicken: In l().inch stilJet, combine c:arrocs. celery, onioft. pWlld 191 IMl'k I. Prepare ~ shell: LlJhtly grcme 9-inch can pan with l'Cm0'4ble water and cognac. Over medium-NP heM. tat IO boiliaa. Aace boctom. In large bowl with bk, combine almonds and flour. With chicken bttasts Oller yqecablel. Reduce bell IO low. Coiief; simmer 1. In~ SIUC\1U fJl/er medium bell. in hot oo. ad leek IDd oaion pastry btcnder or 2 knives used scissor-fashion. cut in buc.:r WlliJ 20 minua or unlil chicken is bi-tender. : With prlic. and basil until leek and onioa ate tender. mtAIW'C rcsembks coane cninU. 2. With slocted ~. remove chiclcm Md YCFilbles ID 2;.quan ~ 2. Stir in soup, waeei-and saffroo. Heil IO boilU.. Reduce bcll IO ~. 2. Stir in remaini'!& plstry h~icals until well blended. With haim. blkirc ailh; keep ...-in. Hell resen..t ~liquid b boilias. Sifn. Sinner I> minulcs, llirri.nc oce11ao.1Jy. o.milb, if desired, with press CYCnly into prepared wt pan. Rdligcra11t 30 mi nu • mer S min&rteS or und1 reduced·by half. · ldditiOm1 frab basil lca\ta alt iD bis dlin saip5. Maka S 1 f2 cups l Preheat <1t'Cft .; 375•f . With b\, prick bocbn ~ pastry. 8ih 3. In 2~ llllCef*l, stir~; ,.....b' di~ ticPd· Add Mlf.. ·· or 6 ~ Jtecipe may be doubled. , 20 minutes or until golden brown. Cool iptly. .. . . t ' , • ( • • ~ • • • . 1 • • • ' . ' • • l ' ' ' • I • • ' • ' • • l ' • I • I I • I I ' . .. and-half. l /2C\1Pofdiecbeaeandpepper. Ow:rlow•. hell until · ' 4. Mt.m'twhilc. prepseJMl')'aam. lnmcldiurnboM,combincall .. a.. mehs. llirrilla co.-~~~.;..:.· -=--o:-~~~----~~~~--~~~~ .. .....-'.itheHMedilelle ... .,.,191Meliflf9ft"j~.1· !Bl'f91~---dlmrtl'lll!il!V~U'll&ill1r.1. \11Wtil~"lliinuer . • ts.-.-ii.,.,,. ___ ....._ ....... •. Mir IOUP maJdUre owerchid1en Ind YC•~ ~a.. widl remiYa-tcnU.. kip bowls d ~ wid\ prlic C"°'*"'5 and creamy. spread in coOaCd pastry Shell. • ... / .. cupcheeii. lniJ61ftCM& tt0mii.4~"";"'Ullil~ .IP,rinkJCd Wilh frdbly plied "'1ncsan cbee9e. S. ln small~ combine alaiC 1~ Hal UIK,ljelty 1M"5. Maka 6 .ens.. stim ... occasioftalty. Or. iD 2-cup 1 mcaw~ combine ID n,: ltecipeC8Rbc prepmed lheld ~*P l ~ IOUpmiJlbare ~and mic~ an HJGH 45 ~ or'UN•l~lly mdb. cwchidraa•,. ...... cowr. aeftiea& Wlleft...tytD~ .. 6. A,,_.fNit<Mlf plSll'Y cam. BrWh1laeCM:r&ull. Ccw: ~- mccMr: •iiillt .. 1a1iiiiiii174 cup C:liae:-W r----#>--.---a=.,..• . • umil tl!:Nlns time. Mako I w:rvi• · 40-....orUlllB._-S~ •' · "' . -. . . • •o•r••• CU• STIAK L& 1.99 Swift$ 6-0z Cordon 81119 Or CHICKEN KIEV . ..... . ...... EA. 1.19 ~ l ............ AL ...... _ REG OR llGHT OTlt STICKS ... s' f2.0unc. TASTERS CHOICE COFFEE .............. . 1 7 .5-0z An.orted Flovor Tr- FRUIT ROLLS Tarkey,· veggie saute Q'ulc ,easy ' Color, texture, tute! Take a ~of veee&at*I. au&e with smoked turkey breast cubes and cre11ot 1 delicious meal-in-a dish, Turkey C1nncllini Slute. pow1' turkey breast, which can be lliced for aandwicbn. uled in salads or cooked with veeetables for a variety or nutritious m~. briaht color. roecm1ry-1Cented &omato flavor ind muty texture, Turkey Cannellini SlulC has eactl- lcnt c)'c and taste appeal. I ... IMf 1111 ~ ... ,. fnMI ,.,_,,, _ ~ .... , .. ...... ~.: .. ··--.. 1., ........... Dccidinf whit to cook for every- day meals can be tryina for busy cooks. With moi"C and more people relyina on fast food meals, fn>zon dinners, or deli fare. the key· to successful home cooltina is to This turkey uute combines smoked turkey breest cubes with arecn pepper and two kinds of ca~es, alona with chicken stock, red wane, plum tomtoes aod can- nellini beans in 1 colotful one4ish · meal. lls total cookina timr. is no more than· I 0 minutes. · TURil:V CANNEWNI SAlrl'E ~ 1 ~ .. t ,...., ••-'M wn•1 I cu (II tuffl) •J•• a. ....... 4ral9M, ~ ..... l CUI (1J ~ Md) eM-. Mw.l ....,, ........ (wllata. breut · 1 cine''"' pa:Ue, mlacH ............. c,.,.,. ~.,... ............. I &ablel,1w•liveolf .prepare quick, nutritious and de- licious meals ofTerina 1 variety of flavQn and textures. One convenient inarectient to have on hand is smoked California- Serve this often fot quick family dinnen. To dress it up for com- pany, arranae it on 1 bed of rice or pasta in cabbaae leaf cups. With its ~ iDMI•• Ma41 H4 cabbace, 1llce4 ..... I Dlffhun aiea41 Napa cabba1e, 1Jlced &Illa THE BEST COUPON OFFER IN ·. TOWlll HUoHa SllCP•as WINI JIMMY DIAN POaK SAUSAOI aOl.L ....... nAUAll SAUSA ... A~~EO .:. 1.69 ~ L& 2.29 ~u~aE~E;SdCRABS ...................... : ................................... L& 2. 98 conAGE CHEESE ~----~ HUGHES; 16-0L ON. • NHl,SLICI a15;~ .. MTll. HW -REG OR DIET I 79 12-0Z CANS • 29-0z Reg or With Onions BUSH BAKED BEANS. . ............... 1.19 REDF I -•ITZ caamms 16-0Z. PKG. I 79 REG . I LOW SALT • ll·Oz. l'k9. FRITOS CORN CHIPS ..................... : 1.77 EGRAPES SEEDLESS ..._ 4" POT AFRICAN VIOLETS. .IA. 1.19 l·Lb. l'kg .. lteg. « Low Solt,. Hormel BLACK lABEl BACON ............... EA. 1.69 •DIKAIOO CATPOOD ASSO«ltO s· ••· • 1. 6-0?. CANS A110t1ed 1~-0z. Cont CYCLE DOG FOOO ........... ~ ................. a9 IU -~· kWHJ--) Salt ... ,.,...._ Cut tu~ breast into I-inch cubes. Jn tarae skillet ~ute .Prli~. onion and areen pepper 1n otl unul soft, about 2 minutes. Add turkey cubes, ~bbales and rosem•ry; saute 3 minutes. Add chicken stock, red wine, tomatoes, beans and ult •nd pepper; simmer S minutes. Serve with pasta or rice an ca~ leaf cups. if desired. Makes 8 tervinas. Guide aids iripicking out yogurts NEW YORK (AP) -Yogurt, yOl_urt, yoaurt. ThCR are so many different v1riation1, how do you know which one to cb00te? There are fruit-on·the-bottom and sundae-style y<>suru; low-fat and reduced supr yoaurts· flavored . YoSUrts (coffee, lemon and vanilla); y~ns you can eat for breakfast.or dnnk for breakfast; snack-size yoauns you can eat for lunch, and creamy, r1ch dessert yogurts for dinner. One manufacturer'has come out witt\ a vegetable yoaurt, while another has introduced a chocolate yoeurt. And let's not foraet the original -plain yogurt. With all these choices, tt's often difficult to know what to buy. To help you decidC, the Dannon Yogurt Information Center su&- aests: -Read the inaredicnts. Most rogurts are made with milk, fruit, flavon and sweeteners. However, some may contain other ingre- dients such as artificial colors and flavors, sums. thickenen such as modified food starch, cornstarch or &elatin, and -freshness enhancers such as citric and sorbic acid. -Examine the fat content. To reduce fat intake and to save calorics. choose a brand made with skim milk.; it should contain no more than 4 arams of fat per 8- ounce scrvina. Non-fat -plain yogurt is a YoSUrt made with sk.im milk. It contains 2S percent fewer calories than whole milk yogurts, no fat and virtually no cholesterol. -Look for "live, active" yogurt cultures. Yoauns that have been heat-treated do not contain live cultures and may not provide all the benefits of yogurts contammg ac- tive cultures. . -Check the size of the con- tainer. While a 6-ouncc cup may appear to have fewer calorics and Jess fat than an 8-ounce container, ounce for ounce, you could be gellln& more fat and calories with the smaller portion. · -Taste the yoaun. It should have a smooth, creamy texture and 1 distinctly fresh taste. Eating tactics can backfire Pressure tactics intended to act children to cat the right foods usually fail and can set the stage for serious eatina disorders. accordina to a specialist. · u•••• ...... sna••• ( AllA•POl••UIGA&• ) ------ic~·~·~·~~~~~~ "The fcelinp of anxiety and frustration set so powerful that the child's intnnsic interest in citina gets los~" says Ellyn Satter, R.D .. author of "Child of Mine" and "How to Get Your Kid to Eat ... But Not Too much." Al ... CllAM•AO• 7SO-MI LIMIT 12 7SO Ml Brut or Eictra Ory KNIGHT'S CHAMPAGNE . 750-MI No Alcohol 1.69 3 02 S..f Or Chicken YEE FU MEIN RAMEN I Oz l'kg MA•UTAMA TIMltU•A 6-0Z ASST 1.19· aAllllASOL AAYICllmAM ASSORTED 11-0Z VARIETIES ~69 l'EGGS LINGERIE LOOKS PANTY HOSE . NOW OH IALll . . 32-Cn . lncludfl SOC Off ST. REGIS CHAMPAGNE ........ . MIYAKO SHllTAKE (DRIED MUSHROOMS) . si•1 . .' .. I.ff LISTERINE MOUTHWASH .. : .............................. 1.29 ~s ltondom w .. gt1, SY/ISS CHEESE .. . .. ... • • • .... LI IA9 i~ ··-·· ru.m · a•••11 MIATS ·rw. 40Z. 69 ~ .-t<G • GtlllY•. II ... ' I Nl~I) r --~ DO .. Yl'LAICI ~~: ., ......... "-. ~ 1 9-0Z I 49 1unoM1t1< e · 14.0z. Soft SUPER PRETZELS ............................ ff ~To 6-01. • ROYAL OAAGON DlMSUM ........... 1.79 .-11n WA l'CI. S •&••••• t TO 12oz. I 69 ITAUAN • v • People who later develop catina disorders show evidence of early problems m their eauna. These problems should be taken ~riously and resolvdtt as quickly as possible. accordina to Satter. S1ans of early eatina problems include poor food acceptance, eat- in&Joo much or too little, delay or difficulty in leamina mechanics of eauna. bcti1vin1 badly.al meals and bizarre food habits. "To f.ced effectively, a parent has to maintain 1 division of responsi- t>ility. The parent is responsible for ofTerinaa balanced diet 1n 1 positive environment, and the child decides when and how much to eat,'• says Satter. Altbouah this sounds simple. Satter sa)'s it is the discipline of makina sure the foods art balanced and resistina the USJC to offer unhealthful snacks that arc the most difficult pans for parents. .. Ute sweets 1nd *-rts modet- ately. Make sure JOU o&t 1 IQOd b91ance of food" says Satttt. She teachn the four food poup 1_ystan for ~lancins nutrients and . coa- trolhna e.tra .. empty.calorie" (ood&. : • qiildml need ~rec eervi'!I' = from the milk and CWty UCU llOUJ). two f'rom &lie ,.,_, .,.,...,, -blr' ad9 hm tllr fnahl/~blft. breldt/cera'ls lfOUPL Eaue foods to be ea1eD ln IDOdaaUoft incNcle coollill, can· .. ~IHIU., .... rok llJld drnM,... 4alenl and eoftclimenu. ..... .. Pastry.chef reveals hiS baking sec:fets _i cook Edition a ppeals to experienced baker: demystifies me s f or t he beginn er about buyina inare<S~nt1. about purpott. And I think the illustra· 11mc thina with apricou an~hcraw· equipment: c:cnainly somtthina u tions are beautiful." bcrrin~ beke the apricots and t~ personal 11 buyina equipment. Dodtt described each recipe as put tbt strawberries." When it comes to equipment.. f can he looked throu~ the illus1rauons. The tceond pl)otolflph hows a CAAOL DEEGAN l#H '1 w.._ ·ajve them advice about what wolks Rcfcrrina to the fif'$t photo,.of his · Fiaand Lemon 1'an."'Who wantito aid in an intcNiew here. ··1 try to best, but when it comes to buyina it, Rhubarb Tan with Fresh Straw-peel a fia. ri&ht? What happens hne explain thinas to look for; for it's what is comfonable tp you to bcmcs, he uplains. "I hate cooked 1s you put tfie skin siM down in the NEW YORK-J im Dod&t is the instance. when a cake is done, it work with... -/ Strawberries. I think they become curd. and because it iuubmer&ed. it ~try chef.for the StanforclCoun shrinks away from the s-n, it lt'tclearthatOodaeisveo<proud lillkspongcs.Andalsoitwreck.sthe softens the Skin. wbacb males it ... hQtcl in San Francisco. A native or sprinp b9cL I live a lot of 1uida of the cookbook'' fayout and ~-flavor. · palatable and it blttds, and this is a on how to ·~~· recipc." sian. ..So what J've done here is take a beautif u\purplc." New Hampshire, he comes from • He says it 1s i rtant to teach ."Eve7thin1 about the bOok, the traditional flavor combination. . The Uitrd photoarapb: Coconut family of hotel owners, spenrrina people aood basic Ood knowled,ae. · design, wanted to make it vtty strawberry and rhubarb, and bake Crum Pie. four aenerations. and that's somcthin1 clsc he's tned comfortable. I like the size, it opens this rhubarb in a crust. ~t it cool .. h's hard to set a flavor cut of He staned youna -11 a pot to do in his cookboOk. up wide, it~s simple. And the and put fresh strawberries on top, so coconut; the best way is to toast it. washer at his perents' New Hamp-··1 try to make peQple aware," he illustrations. there's notbi~ in here you have both the fruits at their But I don't like toasted cocon"ut on shire reson when he was 11 years says. "Use your common sense that's dmamental. Everyth1n1 has a peak; at their best stq:es. I do the top. so I decided to put it in the old. Hemovedthrouahtheranksr--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and, by •IC l 9, was an apprentice sous chef. Dodae waun apprentice to Swiss pastry chef Fritz Albeckcr at Albccker's pastry shop in Portsmouth, and worked in Aorida and M1chipn before JOinina the Stanford Coun in 1978, at •IC 24. His new cookbook, .. The Ameri- can Baker: Exquisite Desscns From the Pastry Chef of the Stanford Court" (Simon and Schuster) is a collection of Dod1C's recipes, all translated into easy-to-follow in- structions for the home cook. The book is beautifully illust"ted with 16 full-color photos. Dodae has tau&ht for yean in and around San Francisco. .He is a member of the San Francisco Professional Food Society and the International Association of Cook-in~hools. 'The American Baker," filled with many of Dodac's professional tips, will most certainly appeal to the cxpmcnced baker, but, Dodge says the cookbook is dcsiped for the beginner -to .. demystify bakina and also to make it more comfortable ... Tbere are recipes, like the crisps and the cobblers, that you can really just throw t<>aether and it's done. "People, when they bake. they•re used to time and temperature .. but those arc only guidehncs," Dodge Sauvignon blanc revived byMondavi By MJIE DUNNE ~ .......... By the m1d-1960s the Cahfom1a farmland cultivated to sauv1anon blanc had dwindled to around 600 acres. reputedly just a third of what it had been before Prohibition. For reasons still not entirely understood. consumers simply stopped buying it. In 1966, however. JUSt as sauviJllon blanc was sli.ding toward oblivion, Robert Mondavi founded his winery 1n the middle of Cali- fom1a 's Napa Valley. That step alone could have helped tum around the prospects for sauv1anon blanc. But Monda vi didn•t stop there. A markctinJ acnius as well as a wrncmakina wizard, Mondav1 de- cided to call his version of the varietal fume blanc, an inversion of the secondary name for the arapc in France -blanc fume, or "smoky white," reputedly inspired by a srayish bloom that settles on the arapcs as they mature. Mondavi initially was uncertain whether his fume blanc would capture the public's unasination, so in 1966 and 1967 he pwd~ 1W0 styles of the varietal, a customarily sweet sauvianon blanc and a dry, crisp, hghtcr, more elcpnt fume blanc. After just two vintqes. however, he realized he had a winner on bis bands and dropped the sauvllfton blanc. Over the past two decades scores of winemakers have fol- lowed his lead, adopting fume blanc for the label and a clean, toasty, refined style for the wine inside the bottle. What's more, the state's plant- inas of sauvianon blanc has swollen to more than l S,000 acres, tbou&h no one is claiminc that the popu- larity of the vanetal is Robcn Monda vi"s doing alone. But with his most recent release of the varietal the 20th-an. niversary Robert Mondavi Winery 1986 Napa Valley fume blanc ($9.SO), he apin is providaftJ one reason to explain the vanctal'i" newfound popularity. While the 1986 seems lighter than other recent vintaaes. it's still a clean, well-rounded. ellceptionally sophisticated fume blanc. wizh ftesh fruity flavors. a supple tex- ture. sha!l> acidity and a suaesti~n of smokiness, pcrt\aps from the sut months it spent in small French OU.. As usual, it's • wine or bquilina subtleties and polished elepncc. food SU9C1tions: The Robe1'1 "Moedavh falnily ii IO taUn with wine and foocf affinities that it hU ~I booklet of the kinda Of that the fume blanc will c:omPkmen.L_~= Herc ate a fri f' •. ltioftl: ~ OG the half' ... ;p tcWle oapift"~•·~--wida .... Md Wild "'* 11119'rlld 1raVioli; U"CM: M01dlih; 1'111 lljl; Oftft ... widl ........ ~~ ... 6d bell PIJpet'I; ... dlitbft; dllli ---~ ... ""'*: .... dlllll fWTI1191 ... ..... ,.mer, ...... "' --o•--DOUll.ITOUI llONITIACI USDA Insp.-Golden ?remium! London :-~~ Broil Save 1.10 per lb. Ocean Spray .32 ~creefnlit I 24 ,....WIUie I .... bL McCadam Sharp __ a Cheddarl 02 Cheese . · •••· I .51 Coachella Valley' each CUpO Noodles .32 \@lr.E ~~rm ~ !obe ·A:r~••:...=.....:.T ~ ........ ~~<!t1hetti I 3 9 Alpo Dog Food ~VeslMl• 14 oa CCID Save50% on Sen1n' Saven! .25 aa..y ..... Cllle-. ...... ~--..... ....... ey..., ... Oao • low\, 1.2 Qt. lowt GI 4 C9. ~ $;. . 7t GI l 4 qt. 5qame lar _, .ft Prices effective June 2 thru June 8, 1988 T~ther~A smarter Way to Shop! . ' " .. • CBrbO treats made to steal.the show . followi tbe Amn:an Dietetic Allociation"'• ~ '° U.Cbadc more ~)dn• in the cWly diet is easy with thae tally diahcl. Tbe recipes can terVe u the main event at lunch or supper, or be a t.emptjna aide abow that's likely to llal center ataee. · . leclably with crunchy null. milk, and mellow Jatltberi cherie. Shrimp with _ llumea and F'k>Uriahes is subtly accented with anow peas. aa~us and mush- rooms. f,..,..nt With fresh buil. Because Jarlsbera melts readily, aauce should be ~tin·amooth. Wann weather aives salads special appeal and this co&otful • Tottellini:Salael couldli"t lie eeaier fOllTELLINI sAuD i C1lft e.M .. meat.ftlle4 tor- telllal ~aa to prepare. (Chill pasta uftder cold 1 runnina water or in tbe re~tor, before mixina with dressana, to ensure finn texture.) Broccoli, pepper$, anichoke hearts and tomatoes combine de- 1 c:wp e11U. lltneffll n.r.u 1 me4iun re4 ,.,,.,, eet la ~-1ac1a ,-.. • 1 e., artielllM• Marti a • • •-t1•1t111, ., • tj)C)Oll Mto lettuce. s.w wtda wn ..... ~ • dlin bMd ttkb. MWil 4 to .6 ) ~ ...... ,.... ....... terVinp. 14 n, _.,,.Ii ,_,., • aaaDIP WITll atWPLSi . '4 n, ....... JtM· .. ti AND nAKJIUlllD ---.• ,,.......,., ••••• lo ,. 1npa..uw1................ ·1 ..... --. ....... .. 1 "' , ........... .,., .. • ................... ....... Jd-• •&rift • ~........... . ... (• .,..., ..., let•• ... • ...... ,..., -... ...... ,. radlceMectPI • . • r~ .. :::~~-..... ,. In la~ bowl, combine all inare· .,. ~--.. ...... ,._ - dients except cheese and lettuce. i "fl~.~ .. nfflt ,..ta er Toss to blend well. Cover and &rteler .-- refriaerate several hours or over-~ "'ttra• .......... niaht. To serve, blend in cheese; ~ C9f Miter er .uprlM . ~"'IMeYJtnam ~ ftlf .............. deeM 1 np Nekhlett eMete. nt la J.ue..1trtpe 14~,.eut Jn skillet saute shrimp, snow peas and asparaaus in olive oil until shrimp and veactables are just tender. Add basil, pasta aftd mush- rooms. Toss to blend. Meanwhile, in saucepan, com- bine butter, cream and Parmesan cheese. Simmer S minutet'stirrina often, until sli&htly thickened. Pout over pasta. toss to blend. A<td cheese and pecans. Makes 4 to 6 servings. (FRESH ] BEEF CHUCK CENTER·CUT Loafing easy with simple bread recipe Meat Deot. Savinas I ..., oj Rib Steak=.BC> . L&'23t Sliced Bacon..,.. •MJZ l'llO '1 39 'Round Bone Roast~ La •149 Meat Franks-. .MJZ .. •1 09 " FNILV PN:Jt(~ SINGLE UNIT PACKAGE 3-LSS OR MORE NOT TO EXCEED 22% FAT LESS THAH Ha 1..8 11.44 LB 8 VARIETIES Frozen Food Favorites Chicken DrumsticksE~L&55' Lemonade=::r~°" Family Steak=:-ia 11" .Nice'n Light:=::..-- ack Ribs ==~ La '2" Klondike Bars ~:: Com pare these Low Pri ces Grocery Specials .. I . • ·-Bone LB ASSORTED VARIETIES Coca- Cola .. 2-LITER A880RT£0 NUMnfY'Tl9. DMCfNAS POna•~ .Bou•e Plants •1!!POT , Bener Roma ucl Ganeu Crusty, fraarant homemade bread from just six inp-edienu - that's the promise in this recipe. Measurina and mixina time is short and you'll have two areat· tastina loaves, one to eat now and one to share with a neiahbor or freeze for later. Don't be tempted to save time by omittin1 the restina step~ the 10-minute rest makes the do.u&h relax so it's easier to shape . .. HONEY-WHEAT BREAD I te J ~ npe aJJ.,.,,... O.U 1 padaae actbe drJ yeul 1 ¥J cw,. water ¥J caplaoaeJ 14 np mar1ar1De or btl«er l CDpt Wltole W~eat ftou In large mixer bowl combine 2 cups of the all-purpose flour and the yeast. Heat water, honey and marprine just until warm ( 11 S dcarccs to 120 depees). s1irrin1 constantly. Add to flour mixture. Beat with an electric mixer on low speed 'h minute, scrapina sides of bowl. Beat on '1iah speed 3 minutes. Stir in whole wheat flour and as much remainina all-purpose flour as you can mix in with a spoon. On a li&htly floured surface knead in enou&h remainina all· purpose flour to make a moderately stiff douah (6 to 8 minutes). Shape into a ball in a li&htly pused bowl; tum once. Cover; let rise in warm place until double (I to 11'2 hours). Punch down; tum Qut onto a lightly floured surface. Divide in half. Cover; let rest 10 minutes. Shape into loaves; place in 2 arcascd 8-by._ by 2-inch loaf pans. Cover; let nse until nearly double (30 to AS minutes). Bake LD a 37S- dearec oven for 40 to 4S minutes or until loaf sounds hollow when tapped with your finaer . Cover loaves with foil the last 20 minutes to prevent overbrownina. Remove from pans; cool. Makes 2 loaves (36 slices). . Trym.aking own cooler Beuer Homa aM Ganleu Liabt and refreshina. wine coolers arc replacina more potent sui:rimer drinks. With .this recipe, you can make your own cooler by · · the aJass or by the pitcher . . WINE COOLER • CONCENTRATE l • ·~ce ea lw cru•erry J•lce Hdtall ceaffll&rate, ....... . 1 ... N ea,,... ....... Jtdee~ ...... ... 11 l•N eM,,.... ........ . J .. etettahle, ... ... for conoen~tc. in a amall airtiaht container or jar with a tcreW·top lid stir toeether all inste- dienta. Cover; chill up to 2 weeu. For t terVina; Add 'h cup dry white wine and 'h cup cart.outed water IO 3 tablHpoom cl lhe concen&me. Serve over ice in a call ....._ rr dulred. ,_.;11a wilh an oranee Wedel or pewpple c11.-.. For ll ••i• ... ~ pitcher ldd 32 OW11(4npl)ta of*Y -'it• ...... Cll'9 ... .-re1lllaw1 11•mW11. Saft OWi' .. la 'Ill p It o.nw.. cliNc..s .... r .. - 12·Pack Meister Brau Beer 12-ouncecans. .,..... .... 99 .· ( 17U) ' . Wl-.W .. .,_ .. ·P E&J varietal Wlnei ASSOrted.1.5 Uters. YCU' Cllorce 2 ·!! . Miiier Lite or DoslQUls . 11exan aeer GenUlne Draft Beer 24-l)k. /12-ounce cans. Yowa.olee -.112-ounee-· 1•• 88 Clausthaler 1''t1 1 Non-Alcoholic Beer S! [11u) 1.75 liters. Your . Choice .. Clen •Ellen Wines •White Zlnfandel •Chardonnay · •cabernet sauv1g11on · 750ML. Your · Choice . [•7J1 J . • seaaram•s 7 . •SCGreSbY · .. •5mlm0ff •Early Times '> 11 · ( tm) .:.2S f0r1.~1 Coot's Champagne •Brut •btn Dry 750ML -l ( 1711 )' • 1.75LJUrs.. 1' SALE TODAY THAU SATUAOAY JUNE 4th OUA"fTITY RIGHTS AESERV£0 . MOOOS BAA CH'S -MILKY-wAV, SNteKERS CHEWY MINTS JELLY CANOY OR 3 MUSKETEERS Suddenly evcrythina old is new neu. Still, flndiaa time for such apin! Food from the •so. is the hit involved ~tion is out of the of the 'SC>i -nostaJajc sit-com ~uestion lbepe dl1\ and we look for ~runs on Cable TV, soft rock 'n' scactuo wecaa.Mveourcaieand roll, ballroom dancina, sphisticated · cat it, too. Or in thia cate, ifs afternoon teas at posh hotels -all eltjoyina this scru•ous N~Bake point 10 the rctum of tradition and a Old-Fashioned Coconut cram Pie yen for the warmth and security of with almost no last-minute Pfel>- by-donc days. aration and of counc, no bOin,; Hiah amona the ~ds is the A traditipnal Coconut Cram Pie popularity of .. real food." the kind recipe used to be enouah to dis-· that mother used to malct with all couraae most modem day cooks - -its wonderful flavor arid rich aood-complicated-directions. all in all STRAWBERRY - -HERSHEY'S lWIZZLERS CANOY BAA . SENIOR cnlZENS 10'/t SAVINGS •au ...... ,. --- JOLL V RANCHER CANOY KISSES l/99¢ l/99¢ 77¢ 219 88¢ 99~01CE Our Regular 1 59 ea §§~ Our RegulaI 7'#" • 15 shcks per s-ck. auo11ed flavors BENADRYL 25 ALLERGY MEDICATION -2~!. Our Regular 3 59 ea 2 70 VALUE 3 roll pack assorted lla"ors Sorry no ratnehec:~• CVS; MILD SHAMPOO 299 8 ounce BONUS SIZE 19 2 ounce, assorted types Sony. no ra.ndlecu UNISOL4, CLERZ 2 OR PUAGEL SatePr.u 2._99 ,.. a.A•r tl.la•t ln Rebll~ -1.00 YOUll 199 'INAJ. COST Our Regular 2 89 ea BONUS SIZE 18 4 ounce snack bars PANTENE HAIR CARE 21!. Our Regular 3 69-3 99 --... BONUS SIZE 19 2 ounce Sony no r<1<n<:"«U SURE & NATURAL MAXISHIELDS 233 HALF POUND SIZE Milk Almonds Spedal Dark or Mr Goodbar BARBASOL SHAVING CREAM ~/150 8 ounce bag assorted llavors 24 Tablets or Kapseals •• ounce EJ11ur FREE 6 OZ CONDITIONER Our ReQular 4 29-4 43 12 ounce Un1sol 4 25 ml Pl11ge1 or 15 ml Clerz 2 7 02 Shampoo or Cond , 5 oz~ 02 Hair Spr1y. 6 oz MOUM80t36 02 Gel. 30 count reg or deodOfant 26 count super Our Regular 1 19 ea 11 ounce. all types 4 02 sunblock. Spray spf •2a or Cleer lotion, ~f •15 <N• Reg 3 87 ..... 2A'1 COMPARE TO Nevt~na V•uedat 958 ...... llestea Tei •• . · ' . Nflllr1l lemon lla>tOf & sugar. 199 m•k• 10 quarts Our Regular 2 911 . .. .. . . ~~~~~~~ .129 ,. . ?~'1 Grape Jel.ly.. . .. as·¢ °"' Regu111 l 119 • • \ Hunt'• Ketchup 32 ounu, 9Q-UOle Our Aegul1r 1 St . 99¢. . . ...... · ~ OLD SPICE • " AFTER SHAVE ·~89. ~OICE Out ~ular 3 89 ea 4 2~ oz .A.Outar, • MUllC Of Trl~ PJ:VLON MAKEUP 3!!. Our ~ular 5 9S-8 50 Touch & Glow Powcter or 2 0 2. liquid M1k1up, LOYl-Pat Prened ~~.lhlde9 AU SET HAIR SPRAY .129 Out R99utar 2 21 20 ~~.•ll l)'P" REVLON MASCARA 299 I ll types Our Regular 4 SO.. 75 Auorted types a lhldes 30ounce FAEE 48 0 Z. TOOTHPASTE SCHICK Pl.US PLATINUM a.AW 24~. 547 'AlUE 7 lnjectOr ~dea FREE SCHICK AAZOR. CVS NON-ASPIRIN 249 1()() 1x1t1 strength T1bi.ts or Capt.ta COMPARE TO Tylenol fct11 Strength lt.6 n·TM CVS Pl.ATES BRING IN YOUR VACATION PHOTOS FOR QUALITY COi.OR RLM IJEVELCl'I OA SWEETHEART CUPS 119 • . NO.Bil.E OLD-FASHIONED COCONUT CREAM PIE .% envelopet uflawored platlD •4 np coif water 1 cu (U oucet) crum of coc••t 1 np ( ~ pblt) Upt cream or llalf ..... llalf • Jegs• t·bd baked pastry 111eµ or palaam cracker crut f c.pt wlllpped cream or wlllpped toppLDI i &1ble1pooas cocoaJt, toa1te4 In small saucepan, sprinkle aelatin over gold water; let stand l minute. Stir o.ver low heat until aelatin is completely dissolved, about 3 minutes. · Jn blender or food processor, process cream of coconut, light cream and eggs until blcn~ed. While processina. throu&h 1Ccd ~ gradually add gelatin mixture and process until blended. Chill blender container until mixture is sli&htly thickened, about l S minutes. Turn into pastry shell~ chill until firm, about 3 hours. Top · with whipped cream and coconut. Makes about 12 servinp. •S1itbstitution: Use l/• cup froUn cholesterol-free egg product, l 'h tablespoons· butter or margarine and ·~ teaspoon salt. Fish ideal -for a 111eal on a stick Beuer Homes u4 Garde•• Kebabs, say food historians. orig- inated in the Middle East, but most of us learned about cooking oo a stick by fixing wieners and marshmallows. Put your stick-cooking skills to work to prepare an easy, fresh- tasting kebab dinner. Precook the carrots ahd green peppers sli&htly so they'll cook in the same time as the fish. DEEP-SEA KEBABS I ouce1 Ira~ or froiem lkbl· less, boaeles11wordfl1h, salmon or ballbat steaks or fllletl, cat '141-IDch &kick i tarae plak srapefndt I I-once cu. ptaeapple c~ms <J•lce ,_ck) '141 tea1pooa dried dllJweed , '.4 teupooa salt 'At &eupooa pepper 1 smaJI 1reen pepper, cat LDto 24-IDd pieces ~ ofi tt-ouee packa1e froua PIJ'lsleue carrots, &Uwed (7tlt cap) Thaw fi~ if frozen. Cut into 'h- inch-wide strips. Finely shred I teaspoon peel from grapefruit. Re· move and discard remaining peel. Section arapefruit over a bowl to catch juice. Reserve and chill sections. Drain pineapple into grapefruit juice. Cover and chill pin~pple chunks until needed. In a shaJlow bowl combine grapefruit and pineapple juices. shredded arapefruit peel, dHlweed, salt and pepper. Add fish . Cover and marinate in refriser- ator for 2 hours. stirrin& oc- ci'sTonally. At serving time, drain fish, .reserving marinade. In a 1- quart saucepan cook areen pepper and carrots in a small amount of boiling water S minutes or until vqefablcs are crisp-tender. Drain. On four 12-inch metal skewers thread fish accordian·Style. On • more metal skewers alternately thread areen pepper and eanots. Place kebabs on unheated rack of broiler pan. Brush with tome raerved marinade. Broil 4 inches from heat S minutes. Tum kebmbs over. Brush with marinade. Broil about • minuta ""* or until fish just f1aka with a fork. 1' 0 tene, am~paDdnfiltecti~piwp-­pie7'"~on 2 teuuce-Uect dinner plaia. Makes 2 .. terVinp . ' ' ~ ' ' " " ' " • Al A1 At AA At Al A• ., ~ I E l I I I I .. • . Westem Digital slgDs pact with Chinese computer firm . Weswm Diajtal C:f>tP., hadauarteml in Irvine, has .. We are very e•cited abOut thtt llCCOtd becautc it tt lianed in llftt~!'!' with China C"ompu1tr: Development our first major ordn f'rom a compul.Cr manu(attwn Corp. for ~~ 1n1t11l ~tthuc or ap to Sl million in .,ithin the Ptopk'1 Republic of Cluna .. aid Roeet w. Wescmi Di1.ual bald dilt c~ntronu boltds and Shis-u Jobnt0n, chairman, iftiidmt and t:J.~ u«Ut1ve offteet ~OCDC's Ofeat Wall mr11lyof compu1C1 pr~uauold ofWnkm ~tal ~ -,;cment is a~ indication tbC~ Wacom Inc.. o(Santa FcSprinp. tMtrqtnt for of the worldwide demand Wattm Oilital products.. .. . tlttm Hen'lisphac, lntemauonat sales have .,own cframalica.lly at The.11tttmen1 &llO aavn CCOC a li«!'SC to build· Wcsltf'D Diaitalua pcrtitftl oflOW revmur. For the fim ·~ ttll ·~ own board lever pioductJ -osm1 Western nine months or fllall 1988 intem1tiou1 salet have Oj&Jtal chapscts -lo o~r compultr manufacturcn l«Ounted for nearly half o~he company's S..91 S21 w1tlun the Peo~'t R~blic of China. million i~ revenue. ' 5 The accord 1s subJCQ to the approvaJ of the United W1n1 Zhi, president of CCOC said, "We are very talcs l~VCf'!'menL ~ 10 cncer into this association with Wes1tm hDCh~enes of IM Wntem Oiaitat controller boai"ds ' DiJital We tnow that tti1s is Just t.tiC bqioniniof a very -t e WD!00)..WA2 and _ the ~0100).RA2 ;_arc produclivcpattMnhip,onrthatwillhelpescalatcfurther scfbeduJed this month and wall conunue throuah the end our company's positfon as China's lcad1n1 manufacturer o the ~car. Once CCOCs board manuf'acturina facilities of computer product&. .. ·~ estabhshedi...l!t~ company will produce its own boards CCOC is lhc laf'IC$t producer of pcnonal computers uRA11~1 ~estcm u111t.al's WDl003-WA2 and the WOI003-in iM People's Republic of Chana with 40 percent oft~ ~ ctupscts. markctplatt. ,. • ' 0rangaCoa1 DArLY PflOT/WtO rr• ...... 1. ~ NYSE UP s & DowNs OTC UPs & DowNs L--=--=-= -----=---=---..,,,..... -~-~ ~ -~ ~ ... vvrnE FIGHTlr-.G Fa< 'OJRUFf American Heart. Association v 2 ·-2~ l4V.. -~ ... 2 --I -1 ,1,4 -~ 1 -2\~ '""' -'6 2•--~-~ ---"" -..... --"' ~-\'4 -.,.. -1 '~ -~ ~-~ 1 -1 -'6 t--'4 --.... \le -Ya lS-16 -s-•• ~-- W% wno Cll rmut fOl 10 Ol. 5'11.1 &W Sunshine Mining Company's prices on sil\U ~nd ~ bunion are already the lowest in the industry And now we have rtduc:~ the pnce on our flAi~y man~ 999 pure sihu I 0 ouncz bars from 75 ~ spot price• pa ounct to only 55 ~spot pria per ounce Limikd tune offer through June JO 1988. •Spot price as quoted on tM (()1'1[}( Ulll TOU·f'llU l ·800-l·son.A SUNSHINE MINING~ 50 )Ut"S on ltlt New b1' 5toO ~ Gd if ~ ''°"' tllt JQUla. - NOTICE TO AT&T MEGICOM 800 AID AT&T 800 READftllF CUSTOMERS On June 1, 1988, AT&T filed tariff revisions with the Federal Corrunu- nications Commission (FCC) for interstate AT&T MEGACOM 800 Sen ice and AT&T 800 READYLINE. These revisions introduce the new Home Number Plan Area 508 in the state of Massachusetts. The new Home Number Plan Area is necessary because of the addition of the 508 Area Code by Bell Coirununications Re search Inc. (Bellcore), the administrator of the North American Dialing Plan. Bellcore will implement the 508 Area Code onJulv 16, 1988. Massachusett s currentl y consists of 2 NPAs, 413 and 617, the 413 NPA con1prising the western portion of the state and the 617 NPA the eastern portion'. The existing terntory covered by the 617 NP A will be divided, with the new 508 NPA comprising the southeastern portion of the former 617 NPA territory. These changes have no effect on most customers. However, changes in this filing may affect customers in the 717 and 617 area codes. The table below illustrates the Business Day increases/de- creases which may be experienced by AT&T MEGACOM 800 and AT&T 800tIBADYLINE customers. H~ Colling Cvn-ent N.w NewChonge Area Area Service S.tvi<• pe1' Hour Code Code Areo At90 717 617 2 + $ 5~ 617 717 2 + s 5-4 Other minor changes in the North American Dialing Plan h3ve re- sulted in a decrease in the cost of calling for AT&T MEGACOM 800 and AT&T 800 READYLINE customers for calls between the existing · 305 NPA and NPAs 307, 501. 513, 614, 618, 812. 904 and 912. • The decreases range from $. 26 to $. 55 per hour in the business day rate period. " • , -· 'I NY S E C ~' "~),. . · r T ~~ ~ ~ -.. ~ r i 1 ~-"-- Dow up 32 more points NEW YORK(AP)-Thcstock market swept ahead for the second straisht session Wednesday m buyina inspired by wanina fears about nsing interest rates and mfiat1on. Interest rates fell for the second stntlaht day in the credit markets. reducing yields on fong-term Treasury bonds to the 9.1 percent to 9.2 percent level. Analysts said revived enthusiasm~both stocks and bonds was prompted m part by ta that the Federal Reserve was eager to avoid ra1s na i1s discount rate, despite its other moves of ate to lJghtcn credit. WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE DID NEW YORK (AP) Jun. 1 NEW YOttK (AP) Jun t AMEX LEADER S I NYSE LE~OER S Goto QuoH s -- -Dow JoNE s A ~ERAGES METAL S Quon s NASDAQ S UMMARY. Stock ~arket rally has analysts puzzled NEW YORK (AP) -The ''ock closed at 2,036.31 on May 4. market broke out of its May It was the: biaest one-day advan« doldrums with a buying ·~ that in the market's most Widely-followed ca1Titd the Dow Jona industrial 1ndu si~a.76.42-pointpinJan. 41 avcraac 10 its second biaest pin or the f!nt ~·na d:IY of I.be year, and the year. the •~th biuett me ever. But IRllJJll were twd-prcncd to .The pin in the Dow Jones indu. come uft with an uplanation for tnals w11 tro •ha a Tuesday"t"s surac. which came on the '° 1 na t • vo untary hnv'iat daily ~ohame sintt lite limit on compu~riied .... m January. • lradina was critlrfed When the eo.,•, .. Somttjmcs ifs bruer juu to ffdoy rise ~ pa t 50 points in the IHt and ftOt analyzr thinp like this." •id bour of trldina. John L Manley Jr., 1 pon(olio But even after &he IO-<'alled .. col· atratcaist foa Smith Barnty, Harris llr"wcnnntodfec1fortbemt0fthe Upbam A Co ... It' been a b9d ~... ~y. the blu«'hlp IVU'lllt etlmdtd Pctn DilPuuo, manaeer of mail atsp n.ltwplhethinttimetbeeollar equity tradina ror S.-f!CM' Letamln Md IOnt lft10 dren lince "'llCIOpdon Hutton Inc . Mid warm Mather over in 'IMl~thOf'theOct. l9nwbt ""l':"l!cr .. :iir.a. Ole.Manorial Dey Mliday ~ M¥t ~·1 en I bid IO cUrt» nierkct brWalned in\UtOrl' oudoob and vU141u uy. proml*d thNI '° ,.., 10mc cMh 1e>. Gtinenouq.cectbenb)"~• waft. • to 1 in nadontddc ~ or New .. Yoa'vttoUONtta•mawrrally Yort Stock EltM• N•d 110Cb. tomttinw. aad )h• Mal o.y & . w.ith 1,2 t I ~ 333 .... Md 401 u..ny the WlilboWIOtbC......,," u.di11t11ill hc 'llia. V ... oalllcloorilthlNYR DI DDW JOMt ·~ ol JO cafnt IO 147.61 mibkJll ...... up l...._...di•bd14.6l•T..., tom llJ.'9 mlfti09 m .. ~IOMI 10 2.031.11 ht lt!lklt liw n -.... - • WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1988 11i stotm recounts orde · . Catalina outing turned Into ntgfitmare as wind. waves wrecked boats tn cove some memberi of t1'e llhia Corine thian, but this year's journey ended like no other. Althouah they checked the weather before leavina port. the Mariposa - captained by Dahl's brother. Dwayne Fe~rhelm of Los Anteles -wn caught in an unseasonally strona windstorm that whipped the seas into a feverish pitch. movetoasafcrport." • Dllbl laid tt.c ~ jwnPtid into· But the Cricket'S"' anchor line be--JN Marjpola'1 diapy. tiiat the caim entan&led in tM Maripoa's propeller o( that boat allo fouicd ill prop. and the wa"es bepn to slam the alK'hof ropes traili• in 1he water. boats tc,.ether with thundcrina,blows , Fcuethdm and anolhcr ·man. outside of Goat Harbor. 0.hl said. , whom Oehl did not know. racued reat'ltint liftd. w mi; TWCID¥t._ amall and o&rcd liUle P1otmio9 from tlw poundiat .. ..,.. 9Dd ...,.... i~winds. By JONA THAN VOLZ&£ Of•Dlllr ........ .. An annual Memorial Day weekend jauni to Catalina bland turned into "a horrible niahtmare" for a S6.:year- old Newport ~ch woman and five other Orange Coast residents when thundenn1 waves ~f\ their boats in Shannon Dolan and her Fountain Valley High teammates went down to a 1-0defeattoSt. Paul Tuesdayln the CIF 4-A playoffs. /81 Nation Supreme Court refuses to restrict grey-market Im- porting/ A4 World Reagans take In Moscow sights white progress on arms pact proceeds slow- ly./ A4 Ind ex Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Entertainment Food Mind& Body Opinion Police log Public Notices Sports Weather A7 A3 C7-8 85-7 · A8 A6 C1-6 AS 88 A3 84, 7 EU-4- A2 Traff le measure baclters cry foul spiinters on the island's . rocky coastline. Barbara Dahl was one of four peoele who left Ne~rt Beach's Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club Friday morning on the 36-foot sailboat "Mariposa.'' alona with five women on the JO.foot saikr "C'rickeL ~ The tri~ is an annual event for Laguna chamber backs recall By LANCE IGNON .,. ... ..., ........ The La1una Beach Chamber of Commerce and a conservative citizens' watchdog aroup have en· dorsed an effort to recall three members of the Laauna Beach City Council that coold cost llllpayers more than $60.000. The chamber's board of directors voted to endorse the special election. although it took no position oo who should be realled or who should step into any vacated positions, chamber President Donald Black said. A citizens' voup. the Laguna Tax- payers Association. also endorsed the recall effort. Recall proponents have targeted Mayor Dan Kenney and council membcn Robert Gentry and Lida Lenney. They hope to defeat Coon. cilman Neil Fitzpatrick when be comes up for re-election Nov. 8 Black and Jim Schlcael. president of the Taxpayers Association. said the special election would be tbe fairest way to let voters speak their .minds. ·•we think the city administration ii very poor. and this is a chance to do somethinaabout it." Schlegel said. CityClerlc Verna RolJin,ersaid tfte entire process may cost the city more than S60,000. It would cost abOut $6,000 to verify the signatures col- lected on recall petitions a net as much as SS.000 to print ballots. Both of these services would be performed by the Orange County Registrar of Voters. which would bill the ci•y. Conductina a special elccti~n would cost aoout S2S.OOO. The entire process may entail two special elec- tions. one to vote· OUI the incumbents and a second to vote in their replacements, Rollinacr said. The Committee to ltecall City Council is rryin1 to avert at least one special election by combining the special ekction with the Nov. 8 ballot. To force a null. the g_roup must collect about 3,000 valid s1gna· tu res a.a.ainu.each council member by midnight Tuesday. So far they have about 2.300. said Rex Brady. a (Pleue eee LAOU1fA/A2) "Our problem stancd with the Cricket,'' Dalli said from her Bayside Drive home Tue$day ... Thote pis didn't have forward or rcvenc. so the> ttcd to our boat when wt tried to "Our anchor broke loose with Ott • a.he women and pullCd them onto the aiant swells and pushed us onto .the san<ts of a small cove just after9 un. rocks. Then their bolt bepn to bmtk Sunday. Oehl said. ' • up ourstem. ~ Dahl said. "I've never Remubbl)'. no one in the 1fOUP stcn anything like it. . was seriously hurt. • "It was horrible ... the sound of the "It was a miracle we didn't eet b11 boat breaking up on the rocksand lftll)'. hurt .... Dahl said. ...It was a the sight of 30-foot wa"es crashina hoiribk ni&htmatt... .J o\'er our stem... -Bt.u l.bc ni&htmarc didn't cftd 1.fttt ........................ ~ ......... TaeedaJ' at tlM ·-or.t Amencaa RCNada Off... . COckroach owners Snare some reaI·prize winners .By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. Dlllr ........ C'alflcras flashed and women cringed as a two-inch Giant Madagascar Hissing Cockroach Cflwled alona the back of Jim Bowyer's hand. A similar ra'Ction arccted M ichacl Bohdan 's decision to munch on a chocolate-cove~ cockroach. .. Hey. I love cockl'Qlches." said Bohdan. a professional exterminator. "They make my mortgage pay· ments." Bohdan isn't the only one ma.kins money off the loathsome household pests. Western Exterminators of Irvine awarded two SSOO pnzcs Tuesday to the captors of the larsest American and Onental cockroaches found in Cahfom1a. Of the more than 300 cockroaches entered in tht ,\Great Amencan Roach Off' contest over the pas\ eight weeks.. the largest Amencan roach was a reddish-brown specimen captured by a Palm Spnnp woman which measured an impressive l.71 inches. A pair of elementary school yo.ungsters from Oxnard baaed the largest Onental cockroach. wbtch measured 1.18 inches. The American cockroach Mnoer will be sent to a fin•l competition 1n Ph1ladclph1a 1n July whett it will com~tc q,11nst the nation's big:st rockroachf's for S 1.000 an prize money. The winner will be enshrined "lt the Philadelphaa Zoo. · "We feel we have as larse cockroaches here as· anyWhere. and v.-c've set out to prove it;" said Bowyer. Western 's sales sen-ice man- ager. before hclpina judae the largest (PleMe ... Pa1ZS/A2) A poup o( four Sea Scouts from Lona ·Beach savtd ...., .. Dahl Mid. "We used rope lifdines Md .. IOnl of knots to walk over tM .iOCb SO another cove. We had to 1tict our finscrs in little ci'ldls lo hinl on." The 'SCC>Yts led ·~ to &.t Harbor. •·hich i1 ri ~ .ooo;.-.. cliffs and inaccasi ~ IWd. .. 1M C...U..-M•~d) . Irvine . ,.. freeway measure voided State Supreme Court ruling limits ~nltiativ~ use in regional Issues ,.,.. staff_. wire...,.... Tbe Stile Supreme Court Oil Tues.- day ruled qainst a poup of Irvine resicknts seckina to block tbe U1C of developer fees for freeways throuah a ballot initiative. The Committee of Seven Thousand, COST. twice rollected the required sip.atures to force the free- way fees question onto the ballot. At · issue ve 1be-a>Uection o( developer funds for the San Jo.quin Hills. Foothill and Eastem fn:eways. all of ...,blCh Would run throuch or near Irvine. cosrs petitions were cballcntcd by a roalitaon of dcvelopcn and business groups that favor the free- ways. \ The imPKt of the 6-1 Supmne Court decision may alrady a.vc bttn reduced because tht curftftt City Council majority ~ permit an advitory VOie Oil the freeway .... But the cut seu a· •'""* ~t to bbid local bllloc measures on certain rilioDa.I i.ues. .. The COnstruc'lion of' rmds k>c:ated outside a city's boundaries cunoc be a strictly municipal a&i.r," aid J usticc Mamas K.aufmu in die majority Optnion. He sa~ a.he state could limit local dccilion.makin& authority to city councils and county supe1vilon in ~~~I issues rather than ballot · 1nit1atJ \ICS. Dissenti""' Justice Stan1ey Maiilk said the ~ority j uitices lmd ~ atect"lheir duty to auard lbe iaiu.aive power." COST attorney Fred Wooc:IM:i siid the ruin\& ... leaves Ille '°;:1~ defenseless" ap1nst'..U.. *'" velopment intercsas \hat ID 10 s.icn.. mcnto to try to thwart IOca1 ~ control initiatives. Woochcr predided lrvifte officiala. (Pt•11-Sl1DWAY/M) . Coast Couple endqw UCI ·Ghair to researcJ-1 pea~e Trial opens in suit· over arena noise ' B71lOBDTBYNDMAN .............. Like most people. Eli~beth TierDcy remembcn arnina history throuah the history of wars. • • • Whether Pelopon~n or T~n.re".olut!on· ary or civil. wars served as the markm for t\istonans to chin the twists and turns in wortd events. It's little wonder 1hen that most stUdents have • a better undel'llllndina of the · eauses of war than the maintenance of peace. · . Elizabeth and her husbend Tom Tierney bcheve that.,.. of that thin kins can be cha. natd •=a.he atabliUmmt el a university chair · . ly. eedoWed for the pul'PC* of peace me.arch. n comana .,...... a tdKtioa committee at UC Irvine is ...,ected to pict the finalist frOm a f~kl of candidates .. lerated ill. poll. .. My t.u1blnd a•I realty fftl it'aa;.· nt to ltiat Ille iniliati¥e aM ed\ICllC for . pellCC ...._ allf .U, we are wha~ we do." •JI. "We wanno spread the awareness that the~ are -a>s \0 live peacefully.!' Tierney says examples abound how to settle differences peacefully and neaotiate without the threat of violence. . -Every day of <>Yr lives we resolve connicts.." she sa~ .. If Ncwpon Belch Hd COiia Mal U\'e a connict, they don•t lend their pblice Clrp!nmmts over to btulc it out. We do raolvt differences. constantl)'. • ..h's especially impon.ant no-. Tkre•s ~neraJ aarttmCt\f thlt we can't aflbtd uomcr war, with the possibility lhat .. it •ill acala&e into aUicttiu war anCS ift1 bi iJr o~. Elilabedl ud Tom Ticmcy. who is ~lliNsident of the Tdi..-11d Vilatcdl latematioMI .tat.. (Oft~ tribu\Cd S2'°-000 toward dtHli .. ..,.., it1bt dllir . which will INe its PIK'C•t UC1 ""Ollllothei'~ chain'dcvoted llKJllly 10 tcit11et and tMdta.e. (Ill'••• .. QIUllL&/~ 1 H~ysuns in aft H8)'.....,,. ............ = -----Thurldlw~_,llllfor. CNlt. MCOF .. to the Netlonll ..... HfGI' temper~ .. t9f'Ot frOft\ IN== IOI n.. the bMChle to,,.., IO lnlend LOM In .. mid to IOw IOI. • Moeti c6Mt .... .. ..__, fWOUgh Thlridar In Southttn elltomia mountain Ind deMt1 .,..., t~•,..atr:om~107t.. 31 to AS. Hfo dMett = ee to 94. lOWI 52 to 82. low dteitt hlghe 12 to 02. LOWI to M . • Light, var table wlnd•Mlll lotoUthwelt of 10 to 15 knoce _... blow acroee Inner ooule& •8*• tN• afternoon OWll a 3-foot .outhWMtew.lt. nw..p1,... .. L.9 .....,.. .. 40 AllMlftJ ,N y. .. • ......... t3 " ::..'\:'Qolt ,. • ........., ., , . Calif. Tem1>9 n N hllll .... N .. A/"""'1t ... 17 .. .... _ ....... .. .. A ....... .. .. ... ....... M • ,.......1,... .. ... .,.,,ta .. .. ""'-54 4) .. ..-.ici .. Ali.ntlC C11y t3 11 !<MIMOIJ, .. .. ..... °" .. AutlWI .. n LelV .... .. n ....,_, u llalt-• . , .. Utile lloc* .. ,., ...... .. ~ u •• l~ 11 12 ..,.. n IO 13 Lut>Oodl IO 11 ~ IO .. 70 ~ t2 11 C11elln1 11 "-de ....... l8cll IO 11 llnll• 6t lol9e .. ,. loeton 13 67 M141tnd~ .. .. ,.,_ u ·-·¥-.. 11 Mllwu .. eo 12 LMIC.Ml• IO .,.,. IO " ...,.....,,. .... ., 17 \.~ 11 ~on.VI 1• .. NMfwlle t2 " Loe n Calf* .. « NewO....... .. .. LA~ 1t CfletteelOll s c '° 17 ......... lt\Q11 " n ...,.,..... 11 CtwteltOl'I w .,. '° 11 N«fGlt\la. u 10 McwwlPM .. Clwlttolle H C .. a Olc ..... Clly a ~ u '5 OrNNI .. ~· =:: ... .. SU.beth Tierney poeee by a portrait ln Iler Santa Ana HelCJatm laome. 70 MOl•NC*IO • Monterey 17 ,....... IO .. 17 ·II u 24 u It t2 11 NNpcw11Mc::11 u . g,::.. ., ~ .. .. ~,fc .. u o.i.Jend 17 CoMtMMe a c • .. S7 p .0.-e tO 12 Onllrio u CoUnllut. °"'° N IO Pr...._ 1$ 17 """' Spr1nOI N .. =rOly COUPJ;E PROMOTE PEACE RESEARCH ••• homAl· . . The scJcctton of a sctiolar to fill the Thomas and Elizabeth Tierney Chair in Peace Research would culminate an effon belun more than twoJcars aao when tne couple propose the idea. The Santa Ana Heights residents have a lonat1mc interest in peace research and are members of Beyond War, a aroup that believes war 1s obsolete and no longer can function in contemporary tJmes. They learn~ that UCI has a proaram in Global Peace and Con- flicts Studies which. although npt a formal major, offers classes that arc popular among students. With the help of professors Julius Margohsand John Wh11ely. the T1emeys proposed a research chair in peace studies the first such chair in the Un1vers1ty of Cahfom1a's nmc<ampus system .The UC Board of Rraents con· s1dercd the proposal and approved 11 after discussing the plan with the Tiemeys to determine what their intentions were for endowing the chair. The resents also were cunous why the T1erneyschosc UCI in the heart of conservative Oranae County_. when work and research that has coo· their dauahter attended UCLA and • tributcd to t~c study of global peace. there was a bcller-dcvelo~ peace "It's also important to us that thfs research program already at UC San distinau1shcd professor not remain in Diego. an ivory tower but be very willing to .. My husband ·and I just looked at ao out into the Orange Cou ntr. each other and said, 'Well, ~ live comm unit~ and verbahze the work.' here: h never occurred to us to do it Tierney said ... He or she should be anywhere else.'' Tierney says. able to speak to people. to articulate Althouah the university has 1tsown the s<>ncem1. y/e w~~~ed a visiblf selection committee. the Tiemeys person to fill thts chatr. have .kept apprised of the progress Althouah the specific role of the and have heard vanous candidates scholar will be determined by the s~k during visits to UCI. universit,)'. Tierney is confident that "It's very heady stuff; I was ~he position will boost the awareness extremely impreucd." Tierney says. !"peace rcsHrch and prompt further .. These people arc incredibly knowl-inquiry among stu~ents and mem- edgcable and t!1at's exactl¥ wh;at we bers of the commup1ty. · waoL And they re very d1stmau1shcd. "We wanted to take these studies full of if!formation an<:t study and out of the realm of politics and ~ally rcpreserit1n1 a very diverse back-understand that it"s in everybody's ground." best interests," she says. "It's 1n the The endowed chair, hi&hly coveted best interests of the economy and b)' university scholars, has attracted ccrta1nly.our,health. internationally known experts in .. Actually there are no altem11ives economics. political science, ~hysics, today. We either lave together or ecol~andotherdiscipli~ Despite destroy each other That's the ul- thc daversc makeup of the candidates. ti mate message. so v.e'd better stan Tierney says &hey all have performed learning how to do 11 now •· Concord.NH 11 t3 ., ,_ ...... .. 11 .. ""8lufl ~ Dllle•Ft WOl'lfl . ., 11 "9llo u • ~City Oeylon t2 ., ....,.__, N a ......,.,. N o.n-.. M ltL~ t2 .. l«t-10 IO o..~ .. • ... UMC"Y 13 •2 ....,_ .. Oet•Oll t3 M IMMI-, .. 7' .... ..._*'° .. Ouill.ltl 11 .,. '*'.Mn."" .. ,. a...Gtbrllil " Ill'-11 11 ..... ...,. .. IS IMl)leeo 1t ,_. .... N ...... .. IO .... ,.._ 14 ,..,....., .. ... ·== •2 • ..,.,,_ 74 ,.,., 12 71 ~ ... • 17 Senl1A.M .,. ,,._.,. 13 ,, ....... eo ., ...... e.tw. .. .,.,_ 12 11 ..... en.. • Otend~ eo .. ,.,.., .. l'lr..,. tO • 8'inl"90...0 10 o. .. ,, ... fl ... T..-.1 17 u larft• .... • 0--o.HC ti . , ..... • 70 .......... .. HWtfO<d 13 11 ......... oc t2 .. llotllton 1t SAILOR RECOUNTS STORM ORDEAL ••• From Al · harbor. the 111-fatcd boaters met up v.ith some campers who were also held hostage by the storm. .. The campers gave us food." Dahl said "And we spent Sunday n1&ht 1n their tents. sleeping ·on the around. We y,erc in wet clothes and didn't ha"e an)' blankets. but we all made it. "Mostly, we huddled together and tned to keep warm. One of the camper~ boats. a 2S-foot skipJaclc., broke loose and we watched the wa,es break over its bow They swamped 11 and it sank. too.': • Final!). a Los Angeles County Shenfrs Department helicopter ap- peared Monday -30 hours after the ordeal began -and lifted the boaters and campers to an inland area where the) could be driven to Avalon. the island's only town. Amona those rescued was a 3-year-old child. Authorities said the waves took the lives of two Los Anaclcs men and left hundreds of boaters in need of help. Other Orange Coast residents that endured the weekend with Dahl were Engel Harrop of Newport Beach. Anaela Bowie of Newport Beach, Cynthia Louder of Costa Mesa. Leslie Rec of Newport Beach and Paul . K1tlas of Dana Point, authorities said. Some of the Goa& Harbor survivors returned home on the ferry Monday, while others returned Tuesday. Dahl said. But before separatina. she said each si&ned their names on a paper p~ate. . "We·re goins to have a sP11rwrcck party at my house." Dah said. "Everyone of them ts going to come. I owe them so much ·· ,CANDIDATES DROPOUT OF GOP RACE •.• TRAFFIC MEASURE BACKERS CRY FOUL ••• . FromAl · that he behcv<'s has led to failed le~dersh1p Roscnber& cited his rTHhtary scr· vice to the country at a time .. when bummg the American flag was th e th1na to do" Wilham Yacobow. pra1s1nJ the efforts by all the candidates. said his history as a self-made man prepared him for Conarcss. ··1 behe"e m what I Missing hiker from 'HBfoundin Utah A Huntington Beach man reported missing on a hiking tnp in the southern Utah mountains was found uninjured on Memorial Day. authon11es reported. Naftali Kotler. 37. was foun4 by Garfield Count) deputy shenffs about IOa.m. Monday. Kotler and a friend . Taylor Rudd. 37, also of Huntington Beach. were explonna the north face of Mount Pennell when they became separated said Deputy Maxwell Jackson Kotler. who was bom in Israel and had trained 1n the Israeli .\rmy Special Forces told searchers he-had some matches and ~as able to build a fire and ~a11 out a Memonal Day storm that dropped about an inch of snow in the area Kotler ~a!> finalh able to find his wa> back to where ·the t~o men had parked a truck at Hancock ~prings. Jackson said LAGUNA .•• . FromAl consultant ·o the recall movement. Black said chamber leaders en· dorscd the recall process because they bchve the council has failed to tackk "the c'1t) 's parkmJ. probkm Last • month, the council rejected Black's ~proposal to form a comm111ec to c study possible solutions to the park- in1 problem • The council agreed said the com- m1tttt was unnecessary because the city's Parkins and C1rculatiolf Com- mlllec is already s1udyin1 the issue. The chamber also made tM en- dorsement because chamber mcmebershaveaccused theorpniu- tion offa1lin1 to take touah stands on :critical ~ssucs. Blac~ said. .. . can do," he said. Patricia Kishel said her under- financcd campaign showed "the great thulf about our country 1s people can get into politics at the grass roots lc\el." Adam K1ernJk, who has cam· paigned on his personal expenences and t.tndemandmg of the threat of So\ 1c1 hcgemon\. s.a1d he promised himself he would be poht1cally ac11ve after ret urning to Amenca from Eastern Europe ''I've complained about our retreat. our apathy." K1cm1k said. "What hits me now is the many ~1t1vc th1 ngs- how I can stand here and tell :rou whatever I want to." Dave Baker. reiterating his history of communit)' service. praised the other candidate' but v.arned of more JllUd-shncmg in the: final Wctk . .. If )ou·rc sitting 1n my shoes it's been a din) campaign alread}' ... Baker ~1d. "and it's going to get d1n1er But not b) me or b}' m:r campaign .. Not attending the forum were candidates Da-.e \\ 1ll1ams. John Hylton and John Kell> From Al with us to defeat this measure." mcnt. C-11izcns' for Traffic Solution!> On~ claim !eve.led by C.tucns' for reported more than $1.S3 million m Traffic Solutions is that public 1m-contributions and loons. about two pro\ cmcnts mandated under thirds of which was received from 35 Mcac;ure A would cost up to S 1.4 county developers and real estate b1lhon. and that most of that burden companies. "ould be bom by cit res. forthe benefit The largest contributors were The of the cou nt) 's unincorporated areas. Ir' inc Co. and the M.Jss1on V1e10 Co .• "This 1s patentl> false." said Larry each ofwh1ch contnbuted SI00.000 Agran. ma:ror of Irvine and a sup-to lhc ant1-tni11a11vc campaign. poncr of the 1m11auve. "There IS no The pro-tni\Jauve aroup. Citizens· mechanism for the county to saddle for Sensible Growth and Traffic the nt 1es with an) of these costs" Control. reported JUSt under $48,000 Norm Grossman. a pro-m1tiat1ve in its campa1Jn statement. The two act1\ 1st from Laguna Beach. said a largest donations were SS,000 and count) report often cited by initiative S 1.000. • ~e1ved from a Laguna opponents docs not say what the Beach resident and a Newport Beach opponents claim it docs. environmental aroup. respectively. "The) sa) 11 would cost the county RO$ers called Citizens' for Traffic PRIZE COCKROACHES ... From Al of the SO entric<1 tu rned in from throughout the extcrmmatmg com- pany's California and Arizona d1v1s1ons .\rmed with measuring de-. ices. 1nclu d1n' Bo hdan's "d1g1tal calibrator. · the Judges examined the dead insect carcasses for the longest bodies. Sometimes. 11 was hard to fell the diffe rence among the top fin- ishers. promptinf radio DJ Bob Bennett to quip ·· , . ., a dead heat .. Western Eucrminators had or· dcrcd that all entries be dead. but intact Bugs that ~l'rc squished squashed or smashed were dis· quahfi('d. Thl' contest was sponsored part I) 1n fun. but also to call attention to the need to control the spread of this hard> hou!>chold pest SI 4 billion to bring everythm& up to Soluuons ''high paid political "And ~e ~ant to declare war on all of the standards imposed by the in· propagandists'' but said he believed them .. 111at1vc. but the report very clearly their hia.h-pnccd campa11n would Bowyer rl'commended that besides sa:rs that the 101\Jat1vc does not ultimately fail. hiring a proks'i1onal exterminator. require the whole county to be "We upect the voters to approve the be!>t "a> to nd a home of brouiJlt up to ex1st1n1 traffic stan-Measure A by a 2-1 marain. despite cockroaches is to seal cracks and dards:· said Grossman. "It takes an their lies and dccept1on:· he said. crl' .. 1c~s to keep them from entering out and out he to interpret this report Meanwhile. a campaign mailer sent thl' home. and 10 control the amount the way the opposition interprets 1t." out by 42nd District convessional of moisture that accumulates in the Aaran said he had received litera-candidatcAndrew Littlefaar Linkina house and a11racts the bugs. ture cJ;uming that Proposition A him to the initiative has come under Bow:rcr is fam1har enough with would benefit .. south county land-fire from Citizens for Traffic Solu- cockroaches to allow the huge owners.. at the expense of other tions. ~adagascar roach to crawl across his count) residents John Simon. ch11rman of Citizens bod) and Bohdan showed no "Th1smailcrwasfondedbyawho's for Traffic Solutions. wrote a draf\ squeamishness. even as he crunched a who among south county land-letter to District Attorney Cecil Hicks chocolate-covered roach m half.' owners:· hl' said. ..For them to in which he accuses the pro-initiative But the other employees and the sugest that we arc doing the work of aroup ofscndina out the mailer. reporters who attended Tuesday's south county developers is an Rogers said. however. that Citizens press conference were less inclined absurdit) ·· for Sensible Growth and Traffic maikr. "We haven't got a penny in it." he said. "I don't even know for-sure that they sent it out.·· Bob Wolfe. L1ttlefair's campaian director. confirmed that the littlefair campaian had sent the maller out.· But even 1f 11 was sent out by Llttlcf11r. 11 should have been n> ported as an in-kind donation to the Pro_pos1tion A campaign. accordtnJ to G regory. Wolfe said. however. that the mailer was sent out Friday. more titan a week after the disclosure deadl1ne for campaign financing. "If they report it to us. tell us how much they spent and how much they thank was on our behalf. we·n be &)ad to report 11 ... said Roae~- FREEWAY ••• From Al under pressure from local voten. would move to have the freeway projects scaled down. Two JOIOt-power aacnc1es rcp- resenttna the county and cities that "-Ould be served by the freeways are holdin& the fees collected by mcm· be rs. The Foothill-Eastern )<>int powers aaency has held Irvine s funds in a special account pendina resolution of the COST legal dispute. "We want to make the public aware of the lifest\.le .ind the vane11es of cc.x l..roadlCs )' ou know there are 4,000 d1fTeren1 \~cies." BoW)er said. toward such bra,cry. When Bowyer In us campaign financial state· Control had nothtna to do with the invited the assembled to cnJOY the ,-------------------------------------------buffet Sljyina. .. We have some ap- petizers. help yourself." the lme was slow m formina. ARENA TRIAL OPENS ••• From Al between the state and Ned Wer,t could be ruled mvahd. Sp1x said. Should .Beacom ruJe against the c1111ens. the tnal would then focus on whethl'r me amphitheater con.sututes an unrcasonabl• nus1ance to nearby rC11den1s. • 1 Sp1x said he would rely on a county sound expert who monitored con- cens last season under •Judae·s ordCT and the residents' testimony to prove the arena is a nuisance. His aoal is a coun order to Ned West officials to turn down the music and rcimbunc the midents torcoun fcos. . .. The environmental stuff is kind of diqm1 at their roots.. and the nus1ancc stuff is trimmma their branches ... Spi' said. • The trial. expected to last six weeks.. will conclude with a hearin& to determine whether Ned Wnt of- ficials and amphitheater manaacr Steve Redfearn violated a court ordtt when ('Oncens last season alleatdly were louder than 70 dcc1blcs - CQually to normal con\ienation -at the outert'dae of1he.arch1. lffouhd 1u11tyofthc more than 200 , contempt aJlqltion1. the officials could be jailed or finC'd . Cir•• ... J'111,fl••• ..... ~=o-.ir '--... A Present For Your Wonderful Dad? A Gift For Your .. Favorite Grad? ALL DRESS SHIRTS AND ALLTIES 25~oOFF •